
This book provides researchers, students, and practitioners with a methodology to evaluate the impacts of a wide diversity of development projects and policies on local economies. Projects and policies often create spillovers within project areas. LEWIE uses simulation methods to quantify these spillovers. It has become a complement to randomized control trials (RCTs), as governments and donors become interested in documenting impacts beyond the treated, comparing the likely impacts of alternative interventions, and designing complementary interventions to influence program and policy impacts. It is also a tool for impact evaluation where RCTs are not feasible. Chapters 1-4 motivate and present the basics of impact simulation, including how to design a LEWIE model, how to estimate the model, and how to obtain the necessary data. The remaining chapters provide a diversity of interesting real-world applications and extensions of the basic models. The applications include evaluations of the impacts of cash transfers for the poor, ecotourism, global food-price shocks, irrigation projects, migration, and corruption. Each chapter provide readers with the tools they need to conduct their own local economy-wide impact evaluations. All models and data used in this book are available on-line.
This book investigates the methodology of Local Economy-wide Impact Evaluation (LEWIE) as a means to quantify the spillover effects of development projects and policies within local economies. Authors J. Edward Taylor and Mateusz J. Filipski provide a technical framework for researchers and practitioners to simulate economic impacts when randomized control trials are either insufficient or infeasible. The text argues that understanding these broader local effects is critical for donors and governments seeking to design more effective and complementary development interventions.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a practical manual for practitioners who need to move beyond the limitations of traditional randomized control trials. Readers frequently note the technical density of the prose, which is designed for those with a background in economic research and quantitative analysis.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2014-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
019101754X
ISBN-13:
9780191017544
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