Title: Getting Serious about Stakeholder Analysis
1Getting Serious about Stakeholder Analysis
- Piloting Political Science Methods in World Bank
Operational Work - Barbara Nunberg
- January 26, 2005
2Stakeholder AnalysisBackground
- Potential winners and losers of policy reforms
can actively influence reform outcomes - To account for role of politics, Bank has
performed intuitive analyses of stakeholder
preferences - Need for more systematic political stakeholder
analysis - Pilot studies conducted by EASPR using the
Expected Utility Stakeholder Model
3Stakeholder AnalysisWhat the Model Can Do
- Identify stakeholder positions on policy reform,
weigh their potential influence and assess the
strength of their commitment - Data cross-checked for internal consistency and
comparability - Simulate round-by-round negotiations to gauge
whether proposed reforms are feasible as designed - Determine possible strategic options for
optimizing reform levels using knowledge about
political dynamics
4How the Model WorksData Collection Process
- Interviews with country experts to define context
and relationships related to reform issues not
opinions or predictions - Defined policy issue
- Steps in the reform process, in order of
difficulty - List of stakeholders with an interest in the
policy outcome and those with a veto - Each stakeholders initial bargaining position
- Relative power of each stakeholder on this issue
- Salience of issue to each stakeholder
5How the Model WorksSimulation Bargaining Process
- Stakeholders try to influence each other to
secure an outcome they see as favorable - Model provides a round-by-round simulation of
prospective political bargaining - Predicts how key stakeholders will shift their
positions - Assesses the level of consensus in support of a
particular outcome - Estimates effect of different initial stakeholder
positions on likelihood of reform success and
level of policy consensus
6Stakeholder influence stakeholder resources
stakeholder salience
Opposite extreme stakeholder position
Extreme stakeholder position
Stakeholder A position
Stakeholder C position
Stakeholder B position
Round x Stakeholder positions and influence are
analyzed to determine the winning outcome based
on each stakeholders expected utility.
Iteration
Model goes through risk propensity, stakeholder
perceptions, policy proposals, and stakeholder
policy shifts to simulate bargaining process.
Negotiations stop if stakeholders see no further
gains from continuing discussions
Outcome forecast, predicted timeframe
7Case Study AnylandProcurement Reform
- Integral part of anti-corruption reform agenda
- Corruption in procurement pervades both public
and private sectors - Procurement process highly decentralized,
allowing for individual discretion - Prime Minister advocates modest reform, but a
strong coalition of interests opposes it entirely
8Anyland ProcurementStep One Defining the Issue
9Anyland Procurement Step Two Positions and
Influence
10Anyland Procurement Step Three Bargaining
Dynamics
11Anyland Procurement Step Four Anticipated
Outcome
12Anyland Procurement Step Five Potential for
Further Reform
- Re-analyzed using various donor starting
positions above and below current positions - Banks initial position a Restructuring of
agencies dealing with large procurement items - When lowered 1 step to support internal audits
within ministries for improved enforcement a
Successful negotiation with PM and other leaders
for this level of reform - Greater potential reform progress
13Benefits of the Model (1)
- Wide applicability
- Has been used to analyze a diverse set of
negotiated issues from business to economics to
politics - Can be applied to various areas of Bank work
- Accuracy rate
- Approximately 90 in real-time prediction of
thousands of cases since 1981 - More accurate than traditional methods using
expert opinion
14Benefits of the Model (2)
- Structured format for data collection
- Predicts the types of coalitions that may form in
support of various levels of policy reform - Allows dual analysis of a macro issue along with
its component policy parts for better reform
targeting
15Limitations of the Model
- Garbage in, garbage out a Quality of data
collection is critical - Shortage of qualified experts on some issues
- Need for in-depth country knowledge
- Operational utility depends on close alignment
with country program tasks - Ability to forecast has not yet been tested for
Bank-related policy issues - No in-house capacity to run the model
16Next Steps
- Establish framework within country operations for
ongoing application of these techniques - Pilot studies on additional country issues
- Develop in-house modeling capacity
- Assess further experience, including accuracy of
forecasts and recommendations