Enhancing the Quality of Public Service Delivery: Insights from Recent Research

Good policies are necessary but insufficient for delivering high quality public services. Building organizations capable of implementing increasingly complex policies at scale is crucial. But most developing countries lack such organizations and ? alarmingly ? most are not improving. Effective reforms in China, Singapore, and Vietnam, however, and from unlikely service delivery successes elsewhere, suggest that three key factors are essential to building implementation capability: beginning with problems nominated and prioritized by local staff; promoting iterative experimentation to identify a range of plausible alternatives; and sharing emerging solutions through a frontline community of practice. These factors also suggest there is much to be gainedfrom embedding researchers into delivery systems themselves, the better to understand context, to map and explain variation, and to facilitate real-time decision making in response to changing realities.

[1]  Lant Pritchett,et al.  It's All About MeE: Using Structured Experiential Learning ('e') to Crawl the Design Space , 2013 .

[2]  A. Shleifer,et al.  Letter Grading Government Efficiency , 2012 .

[3]  Radhika Menon,et al.  The impact of education programmes on learning and school participation in low- and middle-income countries , 2016 .

[4]  M. Woolcock,et al.  Trust, Voice, and Incentives: Learning from Local Success Stories in Service Delivery in the Middle East and North Africa , 2015 .

[5]  Michael Woolcock,et al.  Using Mixed Methods in Monitoring and Evaluation: Experiences from International Development , 2010 .

[6]  G. Mwabu,et al.  Scaling Up What Works: Experimental Evidence on External Validity in Kenyan Education , 2013 .

[7]  M. Andrews The Limits of Institutional Reform in Development: Changing Rules for Realistic Solutions , 2013, Governance.

[8]  Rohit Madan,et al.  Red Tape: Bureaucracy, Structural Violence, and Poverty in India , 2012 .

[9]  Esther Duflo,et al.  PUTTING A BAND-AID ON A CORPSE: INCENTIVES FOR NURSES IN THE INDIAN PUBLIC HEALTH CARE SYSTEM. , 2008, Journal of the European Economic Association.

[10]  Lant Pritchett,et al.  Building State Capability: Evidence, Analysis, Action , 2017 .

[11]  V. Rao,et al.  The Anatomy of Failure: An Ethnography of a Randomized Trial to Deepen Democracy in Rural India , 2014 .

[12]  V. Rao,et al.  Who Should Be at the Top of Bottom-Up Development? A Case-Study of the National Rural Livelihoods Mission in Rajasthan, India , 2017 .

[13]  I. Mauksch For What and for Whom , 1964 .