The Evidence Effect

How technology and smart policies can transform government service delivery

High school students in Brazil sit at desks in a classroom.

The work of government is challenging in high- and low-income countries alike. Today, new problems compound to make the work of government even harder: Governments must tackle poverty and address climate change while many are in the midst of debt and fiscal crises that were compounded by Covid.

Read the fourth post in our Evidence Effect series

Evidence in action

The Evidence Effect highlights examples of life-changing programs that warrant more attention, investment, and consideration for scaling. Explore them below, drawn from more than 1,200 completed randomized evaluations led by researchers in our network.

Rethink microcredit for greater impacts

Innovations in microcredit design can improve business growth and borrower wellbeing. 

To help students succeed, keep parents informed

Sharing key information with parents and students can improve attendance, effort, and learning. 

”Deworming days” at school are something to celebrate

Providing regular deworming pills for children helps them stay in school, learn more, and earn more as adults. 

Play, talk, thrive: How simple interactions boost young minds

A child’s earliest years shape lifelong outcomes. To boost children’s development, invest in programs that help parents interact with babies and toddlers in stimulating ways.

Teaching at the Right Level to accelerate learning

Meeting children where they are helps them catch up in school.

Free is better when it comes to preventive health

Many more people use products like mosquito nets, water-purifying chlorine tablets, and deworming pills when they are free.

The life-saving power of high school scholarships

Investing in girls’ secondary education can have big payoffs for girls and for the next generation.

Soap operas for safe sex: Changing young people's behavior through media

An entertaining television drama series led young adults to adopt safer sexual health practices—succeeding where other public health campaigns have struggled.

Boosting vaccine coverage to save children's lives

Making vaccines easier to access and more in-demand protects children from getting sick and dying from preventable diseases.

Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo joint headshot

The objectives of aid are often unclear.... Reaffirming the most basic principle would provide clarity: The goal should be to invest in projects that will have the largest impact on the quality of life of poor people around the world.

—Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, The Financial Times, March 2025

Discover more perspectives from the J-PAL network

 


Photos: 

(1) Two farmers uproot rice seedlings for transplantation during monsoon season in India. Credit: Shutterstock.com

(2) A woman laughs as an enumerator measures her height in her home in Borong, East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia. The measurement was part of an impact evaluation of an information campaign focused on preventing malnutrition. Credit: Miranda Putri, J-PAL

(3) Residents purchase rice at subsidized prices at a community hall in Jakarta, Indonesia. Credit: Wulandari Wulandari