Pretty sad, in my opinion. In my ideal the state should have visibility into the shape of the people present so that we can make good decisions about our combined organization. I think we’re making a mistake we will come to regret by intentionally damaging our data collection infrastructure.
I think a large amount of the US’s success is the result of good institutions handling granular data. Policies can be adjusted to match outcomes more rapidly than otherwise.
I understand why people decide to diminish all state capacity - they feel that governments are populated by their opponents who will use state capacity against them. But as our relative strength wanes, our ability to overcome these forces of inertia does as well. And then our governments become less capable and eventually life starts getting worse.
We don’t need house-level data immediately (except perhaps in order to place census blocks within their appropriate congressional district etc). But there are aggregation units above which we should be using as good information as we possibly could be.
> I think we’re making a mistake we will come to regret by intentionally damaging our data collection infrastructure.
Intentionally damaging infrastructure is the recurring theme of this administration.
I’d be more interested in giving my state detailed info, letting them run programs. The country can have aggregate data.
That works great for real states, but some states are just three mining companies in a trenchcoat.
But this article is about a decision to damage the census less. If you value an accurate census, you should be celebrating!
TFA lays out why things don't work that way. If you erode trust in the privacy of census responses, an awful lot of folks will have to start lying on their census
I think the TFA was very light on evidence that people's desire to respond to the census is increased if the government fabricates the results later