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November 19, 2024
When public servants perform an impact assessment, they expect the results to confirm that the policy’s impact on beneficiaries meet their expectations or, otherwise, to be certain that the intervention will not solve the problem. Null or “statistically non-significant” results tend to convey uncertainty, despite having the potential to be equally informative.
September 24, 2019
Determining the effect of a program through an impact assessment involves running a statistical test to calculate the probability that the effect, or the difference between treatment and control groups, is a random result. If such probability is low enough, then the difference between the groups is real (or statistically significant) and therefore, the program has a— positive or negative—impact. When the probability does not meet that condition, the program result is null, i.e. there is no statistically significant difference between the treatment and control groups.
Null results alone do not produce a concrete response, and the intervention may not actually have any effect, but we cannot rule out the possibility that the impact assessment did not had the statistical power to detect it. Whatever the case, there is still information behind a null result (associated with the quality of implementation, the take-up of beneficiaries, statistical power, etc.) that can produce valuable lessons for decision-making in public management, as long as we have the necessary tools to extract them. In order to draw this information, we can perform some activities in addition to the impact assessment, which may help explain the null results, if any:
Sometimes, when performing impact assessments, we are unknowingly biased against null results, and thus, we expect the assessed programs to produce the desired impacts, and underestimate the information and lessons that can be drawn from non-significant results, which require further reflection on the intervention, mechanisms and results. While it is true that these activities require additional time, resources and efforts, they will also ensure that, whatever the result, it will be possible to obtain useful and informative inputs for public management.
November 19, 2024
November 19, 2024
November 19, 2024