Does Participation Improve Performance? Establishing Causality with Subjective Data.
Data from 121 diverse rural water projects provide strong statistical findings that increasing beneficiary participation directly causes better project outcomes. Three possible econometric objections to these findings are addressed and answered. The subjective nature of the data does not preclude valid, cardinal measures of participation appropriate for statistical analysis. "Halo effects"--changes in the measurement of one variable because of the observed state of another variable--do not seem to induce a strong upward bias in the measurement of participation or project performance. Reverse causation. is unlikely: estimation using instrumental variables, data on project timing, and documentation of case studies support the cause-effect relation between participation and better project performance. Copyright 1995 by Oxford University Press.
Year of publication: |
1995
|
---|---|
Authors: | Isham, Jonathan ; Narayan, Deepa ; Pritchett, Lant |
Published in: |
World Bank Economic Review. - World Bank Group. - Vol. 9.1995, 2, p. 175-200
|
Publisher: |
World Bank Group |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Does participation improve performance? : Empirical evidence from project data
Isham, Jonathan, (1994)
-
Does participation improve performance? : Establishing causality with subjective data
Isham, Jonathan, (1995)
-
Does Participation Improve Performance? Establishing Causality with Subjective Data
Isham, Jonathan, (1995)
- More ...