How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

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How should we “do” development? From economics to policy

Transcript of How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

Page 1: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

How should we “do” development? From economics to policy

Page 2: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

Why use Economics as a Lens

Page 3: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

Going from development economics to development policy

• Economic models lend to a machine analogy for policy-making– The economy has a few big levers and lots of

small levers (if you like)

– The models suggest which levers we should pull to achieve (some of) our aims.

• Big question: How do we decide which levers to pull?

Page 4: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

Should we start by evaluating the levers?

• Often easier to get evidence on a small scale (e.g. RCTs), and these can potentially be replicated in various environments

• On large scale, we often need to rely on cross country regressions. – But often the mechanism may be transparent

from theory and/or theory can help us break up a big question into smaller parts.

• Yet…

Page 5: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

Benefits (and limits) of using evaluations to go from theory to policy

• Clear benefits when policies can be easily (and scientifically) evaluated

• But…– How do we prioritize action between where

we have good evidence that our model is correct v/s where we don't or can't have evidence (but our model might still be correct - Keynes on recessions)?

• Does this depend on who 'we' are?

Page 6: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

Two visions (or lever rules) for “doing” development

• One innovation at a time–Micro, social policy: Emphasis on education,

health, microcredit, service delivery to the poor

– Case in point: Progresa-Opportunidades

• Economy-wide policy reforms–Macro, economic growth– Emphasis on trade, fiscal, financial, industrial,

regulatory, governance policies– Case in point: China since 1978

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On the face of it, the big lever seems to be clear winner

Source: http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTPOVCALNET/Resources/Global_Poverty_Update_2012_02-29-12.pdf

Page 8: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

Not so fast:• The policies that produced the Chinese miracle are– Not entirely clear

Was it liberalization, or the limits thereof?– Not readily transferable to other settings

• Literature on growth policies vacillates between– specific recommendations that find limited support

in cross-country data“set low and uniform tariffs,” “remove interest-rate

ceilings on banks,” “improve your doing business rank”– broad recommendations that lack operational

content“integrate into world economy,” “achieve

macroeconomic stability,” “improve contract enforcement” …

Page 9: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

And growth has not always produced increase in human development

These are partial correlations, controlling for level of GDP per capita. Source: HDR 2010.

Page 10: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

Yet, a focus on small levers can also fall short

• Treating symptoms of poverty is not the same as treating causes– “humanitarian assistance” versus “development

policy”

• Poverty may be best addressed not by helping the poor be better at what they are already doing, but getting them to do something altogether different– Productive diversification, urbanization,

industrialization

Page 11: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

Yet, a focus on small levers can also fall short

• Underlying causes of poverty may lie at some distance from the poor – poor infrastructure, bad regulation, overvalued

currency…

• Limits to learning from individual projects– scaling up– external validity

Page 12: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

A possible convergence • There is actually a certain convergence between

micro and macro approaches (big and small levers) in using data to go from theory to policy– not on what works, but about how one thinks about

and does development policy

• Abstracting from differences in– level of analysis (micro versus macro), and– empirical methods (RCTs versus cross-country

regressions)

• Recent work in the two styles of work do share common predilections on policy– Both favor diagnostic, pragmatic, experimental, and

context-specific strategies

Page 13: How should we “do” development? From economics to policy.

To summarize: How we “do” development depends on:

1. What we are trying to achieve

2. What our “model” of development is

3. Where we think we have good evidence