ESSC
Creation
The European Statistical System Committee (ESSC) is at the heart of the ESS. It was established by EU regulation 223/2009 on European statistics.
Set-up
The ESSC is organised as follows:
- chaired by the European Commission (Eurostat)
- composed of representatives of the EU countries' national statistical institutes (NSI) and European Free Trade Association (EFTA) countries as well as the EFTA statistical office
- on a voluntary basis: observers from the European Statistical Governance Advisory Board (ESGAB), European Statistical Advisory Committee (ESAC), European Central Bank (ECB), International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), and United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD).
The committee meets 3 times a year.
Responsibilities
The committee ’shall provide professional guidance to the ESS for developing, producing, and disseminating European statistics’, according to Article 7 of the regulation setting out the task of the ESSC.
This means that the European Commission shall consult the ESS committee on the following aspects:
- measures which the European Commission intends to take for
- the development, production, and dissemination of European statistics
- their justification on a cost-effectiveness basis
- the means and timetables for achieving them
- the reporting burden on survey respondents
- proposed developments and priorities in the European statistical programme
- the annual work programme for the following year
- initiatives to put into practice the reprioritisation and reduction of the response burden
- issues concerning statistical confidentiality
- further development of the European Statistics Code of Practice
- any other questions, in particular issues of methodology which arise from the establishment or implementation of statistical programmes.
As a committee, the ESSC also assists the European Commission in the adoption of implementing acts for statistical legislation, according to EU regulation 182/2011 laying down the rules and general principles concerning mechanisms for control by Member States of the Commission’s exercise of implementing powers.
More information
- June 2021: Future data act proposal
- November 2020: Future governance framework for the common European data spaces
- November 2017: ESS priorities beyond 2020
- November 2017: Access to privately held data which are of public interest - Opening up new data sources for a new generation of official statistics in light of the growing European Digital Single Market and the revision of the Public Sector Information Directive
- June 2017: Data access for official statistics - A contribution to the reflection on the establishment of an EU framework on access to and re-use of privately-held data