
Article 1 
This Regulation lays down the practical arrangements for, and the contents of, the quality reports that Member States transmit to the Commission (Eurostat) in accordance with Regulation (EU) 2018/1091.
Article 2 
The quality reports referred to in Article 1 shall contain information on the quality criteria and statistical concepts as set out in the Annex to this Regulation. They shall also refer to all cases of non-compliance with those quality criteria.
Article 3 
This Regulation shall enter into force on the twentieth day following that of its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.
This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.Done at Brussels, 16 March 2020.
For the Commission
The President
Ursula VON DER LEYEN
ANNEX
(a)  1. 

((a)) a description of users, their respective needs and a justification of those needs;
((b)) procedures used to measure user satisfaction and produce the statistical results;
((c)) the extent to which the required statistics are available.
 2. 

((a)) an accuracy assessment that summarises the various dataset components;
((b)) a description of sampling errors;
((c)) a description of any other errors.
 3. 

((a)) the time-lag between the event or phenomenon described and the data availability (timeliness);
((b)) the time-lag between the target date for data delivery and the actual delivery date (punctuality).
 4. 

((a)) conditions and means by which users can obtain and use the data, e.g. news releases, publications, online databases or micro data access;
((b)) conditions and means by which users can interpret the data, e.g. documentation on methodology and quality management.
 5. 

((a)) the extent to which statistics are comparable between geographical areas;
((b)) the extent to which statistics are comparable over time.
 6. 

((a)) the extent to which statistics are reconcilable with data from other sources (cross-domain coherence);
((b)) the extent to which statistics are consistent within a given dataset (internal coherence).

(b)  1. 

((a)) the systems and frameworks in place to manage the quality of statistical products and processes;
((b)) their assessment of the quality of the data.
 2. 

((a)) the revision policy and, if applicable, why validated data has been revised, e.g. new data sources, new methods or other relevant information;
((b)) the dates, size and magnitude of any revisions.

(c)  1. 
The following aspects of the disseminated data, which can be displayed as tables, graphs or maps:


((a)) data description;
((b)) classification system;
((c)) sector coverage;
((d)) statistical concepts and definitions;
((e)) statistical unit;
((f)) statistical population;
((g)) reference area (geographical scope);
((h)) time coverage (length of time for which data are available);
((i)) reference period (period covered by the report);
((j)) unit of measurement.
 2. 
The following aspects of all operations performed on data to derive new information:


((a)) sampling frame;
((b)) sampling design (if relevant);
((c)) source data;
((d)) frequency of data collection;
((e)) data collection mode including, if relevant, the questionnaires (in English);
((f)) data validation;
((g)) data compilation;
((h)) adjustment.
 3. 
The rules for disseminating the data at national level.
 4. 
The frequency with which the data are disseminated at national level.

(d)  1. 

((a)) legal acts or other agreements that assign responsibility and authority for the collection, processing and dissemination of statistics;
((b)) procedures for data sharing and coordination between data-producing entities.
 2. 

((a)) legislative measures or other formal procedures preventing any unauthorised disclosure of data that could directly or indirectly lead to the identification of a person or economic entity;
((b)) the rules applying to the treatment of micro data and aggregated data to ensure statistical confidentiality and prevent unauthorised disclosure.
 3. 

((a)) the cost and burden associated with the collection and production of the statistical product;
((b)) the burden on respondents;
((c)) the average duration of farm interviews (where possible and relevant depending on the data collection mode).
