Title: The Governance Triad
1Assessing the Distributional Impact of Social
Programs
Public Expenditure Analysis and Manage Core Co
urse
Presented by Dominique van de Walle DECRG
March 21-24, 2005
Presented to
2The evaluation problem
- Who gains from the programs?
- Who uses public services? At what cost?
- Who benefits from subsidies?
- Who are the target groups?
- How should transfers be allocated?
- 2. How much do they gain?
- Is there more poverty with or without a policy?
- How much impact will programs have on poverty?
3The evaluation problem
- Impact is the difference between the outcome
indicator with the program and that without it.
- However, we can never simultaneously observe
someone in two different states of nature
- So, while a post-intervention indicator is
observed, its value in the absence of the program
the counterfactual is not.
- The essential problem in evaluation is one of
missing data on the counterfactual of what would
have happened in the absence of the intervention
4- To measure impacts rigorously we need ex-post
impact evaluation techniques
- Econometric generally need baseline or panel
data
- Experimental require randomized assignment
- Often we must instead turn to other quick
dirty approaches that examine spending
"incidence
- The most commonly used is Benefit Incidence
Analysis (BIA)
5What is benefit incidence analysis?
- Step 1 rank individuals by welfare indicator
-
- Access to services
-
- Step 2 identify usage/participation
-
- Utilization
-
- Step 3 attribute "gain" or benefit identified by
unit
- cost of providing service
-
- Incidence of spending
6STEP 1 Access to infrastructure in rural Vietnam
( rural population with the infrastructure)
7 Step 2 Participation in public works and a
means-tested credit subsidy in Maharashtra,
India
Consumption expenditure per person
8Step 3 A typical example of a benefit
incidence analysis
9Health spending in Kenya, 1992
100
80
Primary
Hospital
60
All health
Cumulative subsidy/income
Income
40
20
0
0
20
40
60
80
100
Cumulative population
10- Advantages of traditional benefit incidence
analysis
- Easy to do and to present (with caveats)
-
- Disadvantages and limitations
-
- Strong assumptions
- Do not explain incidence outcomes
- No specific policy implications
11Traditional benefit incidence analysis may...
- 1. Wrongly assume that the cost of provision
reflects the benefit to user
- 2. Be sensitive to method of ranking households
in the original position
- spatial prices, comprehensiveness of welfare
- indicator, demographics
12The welfare measure matters for primary education
in Ghana
100
80
Per capita expenditure
60
Adult equivalent
Cumulative subsidy
expenditure
40
20
0
0
20
40
60
80
100
Cumulative population
13How quintiles are defined matters for health in
Ghana
100
80
60
Household quintiles
Population quintiles
Cumulative subsidy
40
20
0
0
20
40
60
80
100
Cumulative population
14Traditional benefit incidence analysis may...
- 3. Mispecify the counterfactual BIA ignores
behavioral responses
-
- ex figure of transfers in Yemen
- Conclusions about targeting incidence depend on
how the counterfactual is defined
15Distribution of public and private transfers in
Yemen, 1998, by deciles of per capita
expenditures excluding transfers (annual YR per
capita)
16Distribution of public and private transfers in
Yemen, 1998, by deciles of per capita
expenditures including transfers (annual YR per
capita)
17Traditional benefit incidence analysis may...
- 4. Give an incomplete picture of welfare
effects
- how did other dimensions of welfare (eg health
- literacy, nutrition) improve as a result of
subsidies?
- 5. Be unable to assess some important public
goods and services
- eg safe water, sanitation, vector control,
physical infrastructure
18Traditional benefit incidence analysis may...
- Ignore general equilibrium indirect effects on
poor
- eg indirect benefits from tertiary education
- 7. Confound average and marginal incidence
- Distribution of gains
197. Average versus marginal incidence
- Standard benefit incidence estimates the
distribution of average incidence at one point in
time
- This can be deceptive about how changes in public
spending will be distributed
- Marginal incidence is an example of a behavioral
incidence analysis where one measures the
incidence of actual increases or cuts in program
spending
20How will gains from social program expansion be
distributed across groups?
- Non-poor often capture benefits of (even
targeted) social programs
-
- information, incentive political problems
make perfect targeting hard
- But, program capture by non-poor can differ
according to how costs benefits of
participation vary with program scale
-
- eg fees, opportunity costs of time, transport
costs etc
-
21How will gains from social program expansion be
distributed across groups?
- Model 1 Early capture by non-poor net gains to
non-poor are positive initially, but fall with
program expansion
- Model 2 Late capture by non-poor cost initially
too high for the non-poor, but net gains rise
over time
- Average participation rates may be deceptive for
inferring how gains losses from program
expansion or contraction will be distributed.
22- One way to identify marginal incidence is to
compare incidence across geographic areas with
different program sizes
- Marginal odds of participation (MOP)
- increment to group-specific participation rate
with a change in overall participation
-
- The income group specific MOP is estimated by
regressing income group specific participation
rate across regions on the average rate for the
region. - MOP shows incidence of a change in spending
23Average and Marginal Odds of Primary School
enrollment, India 1993-94
Note odds of enrollment ratio of
quintile-specific enrollment rate to the mean
rate.
24In conclusion
- Extreme care is needed when interpreting average
incidence and traditional benefit incidence
analysis
-
- Beware of reform recommendations based solely on
BIA and concentration curves as conventionally
calculated.
25Q A