Interview with Vic Van Vuuren, Director of ILO Enterprises Department, on statistics of cooperatives
ILO Enterprises Department Director, current Chair of Committee for the Promotion and Advancement of Cooperatives (COPAC), reflects on the progress of the work around statistics on cooperatives to date.
1. Why do you think statistics on cooperatives are needed?

2. What has the ILO been doing on statistics of cooperatives since the 19th ICLS?
Since then, the ILO, through its Department of Statistics and the Cooperatives Unit of the Enterprises Department, has been working on advancing the understanding of statistics on cooperatives in close collaboration with relevant stakeholders, including other international organizations and national statistics offices (NSOs). These joint efforts have resulted in numerous outputs.The first report was a global mapping providing an analysis based on a database of how statistics on cooperatives were produced in more than 70 countries around the world. In follow up, eleven countries were selected, where different types of institutional arrangements are used in gathering statistics, for deeper review (Spain, Italy, France, Republic of Korea, Costa Rica, Russian Federation, Canada, Colombia, Brazil, the UK and the Philippines).
3. What are the key partnerships in this effort?
In 2016, the Committee for the Promotion and Advancement of Cooperatives (COPAC) established a Technical Working Group (TWG) for Statistics on Cooperatives with the participation of cooperative movement and NSO representatives, policy makers and researchers in order to support preparatory work towards the 20th ICLS in October 2018.During the first meeting of the TWG in May 2017 a Conceptual Framework on Measurement of Cooperatives and its Operationalization was presented and discussed. In this meeting TWG members proposed to undertake several additional studies in time for the 20th ICLS: one on use of statistics on cooperatives in national policy making; a second one on cooperative employment measurement; a third one on classification of cooperatives; and finally a fourth one on value-added of cooperatives. They also proposed that the latter three serve as background studies for a set of guidelines on statistics on cooperatives.