Finance & economics | Free exchange

In poor countries, statistics are both undersupplied and underused

Governments often lack incentives to collect, share and use data

IN THE RICH world, people worry that prying governments know too much about them. Popular culture valorises characters who go off the grid, like Jack Reacher (the hero of 25 novels by Lee Child and two films starring Tom Cruise). He drifts around America on Greyhound buses, eschewing a driving licence, credit cards and email. Why does he make himself so hard to find? “It started out as an exercise and became an addiction,” he says.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Our world, not in data”

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