Title: Developing an Evaluation Strategy
1Developing an Evaluation Strategy experience in
DFIDNick YorkDirector Country, Corporate
and Global Evaluations, World Bank IEGFormer
Chief Professional Officer and Head of
Evaluation, DFIDPresentation to IEG Evaluation
Week 19 March 2013
2Policy context
- First UK government department to have a formal
evaluation policy (2009) - Coalition government (May 2010) announced their
commitment to rigorous, independent evaluation of
a rapidly expanding aid programme - Decided to honour the international commitments
on aid (0.7 of GNI) but - Strong focus on value for money and impact
- Decisions on the basis of evidence not
guesswork - Decision to set up Independent Commission for Aid
Impact
3Evaluation strategy - part of a wider strategy on
value for money, evidence and results
- Programme design and appraisal significant
changes in DFID to move to new rigorous business
case process including ex ante appraisal of
evidence for new programs - Evidence in decision making major changes to
DFIDs research strategy and use of evidence in
policy and programme design - Strengthening performance monitoring and data
systems in DFID and also in developing
countries - Developing skills and a culture where use of
evidence and evaluation is the norm
4Key strategic themes in evaluation policy and
approach in DFID
- Independence do you tackle this through
structures and reporting, or professionalism and
integrity of staff - Relevant and useful recognise the endemic
weakness in many evaluation systems on follow up
and feedback into decision making - High quality including rigour on methods and
use of multidisciplinary, cutting edge techniques - Partnership we depend on data systems and
engagement from other development partners - Capacity and systems in DFID and in developing
countries
5Independent Commission on Aid Impact
- Visibly independent and well resourced
- reports to Parliament, through international
development select committee, not to DFID
Ministers. - Senior commissioners with strong leadership
skills - Staffing from National Audit Office secondees and
private sector - 5m per annum programme
- Covers all Overseas Development Aid, including in
DFID but also other government departments. - Forward work programme was based on public
consultation but also kept flexibility to respond
to topical issues from Parliament and media - Strong follow up arrangements through
reevaluation after 1 year
6Embedding evaluation in DFID
- External scrutiny is only part of the picture
need to build evaluation into the programme cycle
and make it a routine part of how we do business - Ambitious expansion in decentralised evaluations
is planned number and quality - Evaluations commissioned by operational teams
with professional analytical input and support
from centre - Part of this is a much greater emphasis on
rigorous methods and impact evaluation with clear
counterfactual - Requires a change in culture and an expansion in
evaluation skills within operational/policy teams
7Leadership, Incentives and Support
- Leadership is vital - Ministers and Board clear
that high quality evaluation (including at
operational level) is a priority within DFIDs
approach to value for money - Shift away from central evaluation department to
encouraging staff to take ownership of agenda - New evaluation cadre of specialists with peer
recognition from accreditation, training and
guidance - Use professional groups such as economists,
statisticians and health, education, governance,
social development specialists etc. - Financial incentives come from career
opportunities, making additional resources
available for new studies, and pump priming and
offering funds for training and support
8Strategic choices
- Types of evaluation process, summative, impact
evaluation, post project evaluation - Delivery modes from within DFID or through
international systems and partners - Role of centre versus operational and embedded
analysts, how much to manage/deliver internally
or contract out - Timing - Design into programmes from the start
to allow impact to be measured rigorously. - Focus on external scrutiny and upward/outward
accountability or providing evidence for
decision making and internal lesson learning
9Building a culture?
- Clear policy framework, leadership and
incentives - Take seriously the need for better data and
indicators, including baselines that take account
of how we will want to assess impact later in the
programme - Major shift in timing and approach from mainly ex
post approach to prospective, formative and ex
post. Build evaluations into programmes from the
start and consider and plan for ME before
programs are designed and resources are released.
- Build evaluation skills in DFID and in partner
organisations, including systems for independent
evaluation in country
10Lessons and challenges (1)
- Shift to operational ownership of evaluations has
major benefits on relevance, design, scope to
measure impact and potential for lesson learning
by decision makers - More decentralised approach places big demands on
skills and requires thought on quality standards
and continuous professional development - Creates risks around strategic focus and requires
central mechanisms (led by policy teams) for
lesson learning across the whole organisation (as
opposed to within programs)
11Lessons and challenges (2)
- Major expansion in impact evaluations (using a
range of methods) and use of systematic reviews.
This creates more global knowledge output from
evaluation. - Decentralisation of ME expertise allows much
closer working with client countries, including
for evaluation capacity development and joint,
country-led evaluation - Independence of evaluation and accountability -
now mainly driven by ICAI (super independent) and
within DFID the focus is on quality, credibility
and integrity of evaluations with more
potential for lesson learning