Jack Hibbert
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Sir Jack Hibbert (14 February 1932, Huddersfield - 23 August 2005, Weybridge, Surrey) was head of the United Kingdom's Central Statistical Office (CSO), 1985-1992. He was made a KCB in 1990.
[edit] Shake-up in the CSO
When Jack Hibbert took over the CSO, it had suffered four years of cutbacks following the Rayner review of official statistics. Shortly after this, Nigel Lawson and other Conservative politicians claimed that misleading statistics were largely responsible for the Government's poor handling of the economy. The Treasury and Civil Service Select Committee recommended 'a thorough review into the operation of various Departments involved in the collection of national accounts statistics'. The review, by Stephen Pickford, recommended that there should be just one organisation responsible for the collection and compilation of statistics for national accounts.
This meant moving the Business Statistics Office and responsibility for data on imports and exports from the Department of Trade and Industry, and responsibility for the Retail Prices Index from the Department of Employment. The changes, in July 1989, increased the CSO from just under 170 staff to about 1,000. This was probably the biggest shake-up of official statistics since the creation of the CSO in 1941. Jack Hibbert had the difficult job of creating this new organisation.
[edit] Obituaries
- Robin Lynch Sir Jack Hibbert, 1932–2005, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society) March 2006, pp. 382-4.
- Independent: Sir Jack Hibbert