The Evidence Effect

Ideas for the future of development

Our Evidence Effect blog series shares what we have learned about improving the lives and livelihoods of people who are experiencing poverty or affected by a volatile climate. We discuss how these lessons have changed thinking, investments, and outcomes that matter—like people living longer and healthier lives, escaping extreme poverty, and gaining better economic opportunities. 

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.

Soft skills training can help people get and keep jobs, improve performance at work, and increase business profits—but design matters.

Helping small and mid-sized businesses make connections with new buyers, and with each other, leads to growth, higher productivity, and better jobs.

Stronger connections between farmers and buyers enable farmers to invest and earn more.

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

Flood-tolerant seeds help farmers adapt to extreme weather without sacrificing their yields, making investing in change worthwhile. 

Governments can adopt high- and low-tech approaches to raise resources through improved taxation.

Phone-based monitoring is a cheap, accessible way to ensure government service providers are doing their jobs well.

An AI-powered editing tool gave students personalized feedback and helped teachers spend more of their time one-on-one with students.

Customizing information and offering mediation helped Mexico’s labor courts deliver faster, fairer resolutions for workers and led to a major national reform.

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) Credit: Official, Shutterstock.com