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OVE

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OVE s Experience with Impact (Treatment) Evaluations Presentation prepared for DAC, 15th November 2006 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: OVE


1
OVEs Experience with Impact (Treatment)
Evaluations
  • Presentation prepared for DAC, 15th November 2006

2
Policy
  • The general evaluative questions proposed by the
    IDBs ex post policy, approved in 2003, are (i)
    the extent to which the development objectives
    of IDB-financed projects have been attained. and
    (ii) the efficiency with which those
    objectives have been attained (para1.1 )
  • Policy left for practice sampling, methodology,
    organizational framework, and the forum for the
    presentation of results.
  • Note the task is to evaluate already approved
    and/or closed projects ( average project time is
    about six years).

3
Implementation decisions
  • Project Sampling Strategy Option random or
    meta-evaluation. Decision meta-evaluation.
  • Method and Project types (i) process cum naïve
    or treatment (impact) evaluations. Decision
    Treatment effect evaluations and (ii) projects
    with partial or national coverage. Decision
    partial coverage models
  • Organizational. Decisions (I) separate activity
    within the office (ii) evaluations to be
    carried out both in-house and outsourced.Therefore
    (I) hired staff with appropriate expertise and
    (ii) created EVALNET, a register of evaluators
  • Forum for presenting results. Decision overall
    report (sent to the Board) with
    background-working papers (discussed in ad hoc
    seminars).

4
Evaluative questions
  • what were the problems that the program was
    designed to tackle?
  • what was the policy response, i.e. the design
    features of the program? (theory based
    evaluation)
  • was the program of a sufficient size given the
    size of the problem(s)?
  • were the programs deliverables provided in a
    cost efficient (and cost effective manner)?
  • What was the incidence and was the program well
    targeted?
  • what was the impact on welfare outcomes of the
    program?and
  • what were the benefits relative to the cost of
    the program ?

5
What was the impact on welfare outcomes of the
program?
  • To answer the question OVE normally use three
    approaches in the same evaluation
  • Naïve evaluation
  • Regression based (cross-section and panel)
  • Treatment effects

6
Social Investment Fund (naïve evaluations can be
misleading
  • Profile
  • Social Investment Fund. Panama
  • Basic Infrastructure to poor communities
  • Data
  • Distribution of benefits by municipalities from
    administrative data
  • Baseline and results of outcome indicators from
    households surveys 1994-2001
  • Technique
  • Treatment and comparison group using PSM in
    double difference. The sample included 75
    municipalities.
  • Potential to work with a sample of more than 250
    smaller geographic units but household survey was
    not representative at that level
  • Results
  • Naïve evaluation the program failed. Impact
    evaluation the program succeeded

7
Labor Training Project (positive effects)
  • Profile
  • Labor Training program Dominican Republic
  • Data
  • Simple randomization including a follow-up
    survey done at 10-14 months after graduation from
    training
  • 786 treated and 563 controls
  • Baseline has universe, follow up was a stratified
    random sample (size determined by standard
    formulas)
  • Technique
  • Estimated average Intention-to-treat on treated
    by simple diff of means, verified with weighted
    diff and regression analysis (no DD b/c faulty
    baseline)
  • Results
  • Employability, income and health insurance access
    increased. Program succeeded

8
Public Housing Program
  • Profile
  • Progressive Housing Phase I Chile
  • Provision of low cost basic dwellings to poor
    families
  • Data
  • Household Surveys identified beneficiaries and
    applicants to the specific housing program
  • Technique
  • Treatment from beneficiaries and comparison from
    applicants using PSM. Single difference from a
    sample of 508 Beneficiaries and 476 applicants
  • Results
  • Quality of dwellings improved
  • Little or not change in other welfare outcome
    indicators.
  • Difference between naïve versus impact

9
Costs, benefits, and internal rate of return
  • Profile
  • Progressive Housing Phase I Chile
  • Provision of low cost basic dwellings to poor
    families
  • Data
  • Household Surveys identified beneficiaries and
    applicants to the specific housing program
  • Technique
  • The benefits of the program are the additional
    (necessary) household income required to obtain
    equivalent dwelling
  • Results
  • IRR greater than 18
  • Benefits Net present value per solution 1150 US

10
Rural Roads (decay of benefits over time)
  • Profile
  • Rural Road Peru
  • Construction and upgrade of roads in rural areas
  • Data
  • Specific survey of beneficiaries. Baseline
    collected after program started. Follow-up survey
    3 years after program closed
  • Technique
  • single difference and double difference
  • Results
  • Positive impact on income and assets values of
    rural households.
  • Decreasing impact for motorized roads not for
    non-motorized roads.

11
National Transfer Fund (dosage and
multi-treatment effects)
  • Profile
  • National Fund for Regional Development
  • Decentralized investment to finance
    infrastructure and productive projects
  • Data
  • Administrative data for distribution of benefits
    by municipalities
  • Baseline and results of outcome indicators from
    households surveys 1994-2001. The sample included
    343 municipalities.
  • Technique
  • Impact evaluation using PSM in double difference.
    The municipalities grouped by per capita
    investment using cluster analysis.
  • Results
  • Positive and increasing impact on poverty
    incidence (reduction) on per capita investment
  • Not impact on poverty if investment is intensive
    in education
  • Greater impact on welfare composite index in
    municipalities with diversified investment

12
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Research
  • Profile
  • Science and Technology Chile
  • Financing for RD projects
  • Data
  • All projects that between 1988 and 2004 received
    the financial support of the program and a
    stratified sample of projects submitted to the
    program, which were not financed because they
    ranked below the threshold defined for being
    admitted to the financing.
  • 2,936 different research projects (932 financed
    by the FONDECYT and 1704 not financed) 4,959
    publications recoded in the ISI SCI (1873 by
    financed researchers and 3806 by not financed
    researchers).
  • Technique
  • Discontinuity regression design. The selection
    process drawn by a threshold quality value that
    separates beneficiaries from non-beneficiaries
  • Results
  • Unsuccessful. FONDECYT has no significant
    positive impact on the scientific production of
    the financed projects.

13
Technology Development Funds
  • Profile
  • Public grants-credits to firms for innovation
  • Data
  • Administrative data on firms and firm level
    surveys (OSLO design)
  • Technique
  • Double difference with propensity score
    matching
  • Results
  • Generally positive and significant effects
    on employment, and sales, but little evidence of
    effects on patents and total productivity .

14
EXPERIENCE Findings Potable Water
  • Positive effect on health outcome (treatment
    less than naïve effect)
  • heterogeneity of results important. a regressive
    relationship between treatment effect and income,
    where more educated (and wealthier) households
    did better than less educated (and poorer)
    households
  • Ramification for project design projects should
    include or be coordinated with, as a hypothesis
    to be tested, a health education component
    together with potable water expansion.

Impact on infant mortality
15
Balance
  • Since 2004 have produced about 23 evaluations
  • Cost per evaluation was about 60,000
  • But
  • Problem of obtaining effective counterparts (in
    Bank and country) to accompany the evaluation
    from beginning to end. Started outreach program
    to obtain formal counterparts in the country, and
    form ad hoc interested specialist for each
    thematic study.
  • Mainstream impact evaluations into other
    evaluations of the Office
  • Problem of communicating the findings. Started
    producing different reports for different
    audiences for the same evaluations.

16
Still far from the million words of a good picture
  • Before
  • After

17
Regression Approach
  • Panel data
  • Cross section data
  • Where y is the outcome of interest, D is the
    dummy for participation in the program, V control
    variables
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