How Can We Learn Whether Firm Policies are Working in Africa? [electronic resource] : Challenges (and Solutions?) for Experiments and Structural Models / David McKenzie

By: McKenzie, DavidContributor(s): McKenzie, DavidMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Washington, D.C., The World Bank, 2011Description: 1 online resource (26 p.)Subject(s): Banks & Banking Reform | E-Business | Finance and Private Sector Development | Firm Productivity | ICT Policy and Strategies | Impact Evaluation | Microfinance | Private Sector Development | Randomized Experiments | Small Scale Enterprise | Structural ModelsAdditional physical formats: McKenzie, David.: How Can We Learn Whether Firm Policies are Working in Africa?Online resources: Click here to access online Abstract: Firm productivity is low in African countries, prompting governments to try a number of active policies to improve it. Yet despite the millions of dollars spent on these policies, we are far from a situation where we know whether many of them are yielding the desired payoffs. This paper establishes some basic facts about the number and heterogeneity of firms in different sub-Saharan African countries and discusses their implications for experimental and structural approaches towards trying to estimate firm policy impacts. It shows that the typical firm program such as a matching grant scheme or business training program involves only 100 to 300 firms, which are often very heterogeneous in terms of employment and sales levels. As a result, standard experimental designs will lack any power to detect reasonable sized treatment impacts, while structural models which assume common production technologies and few missing markets will be ill-suited to capture the key constraints firms face. Nevertheless, the author suggests a way forward which involves focusing on a more homogeneous sub-sample of firms and collecting a lot more data on them than is typically collected.
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Firm productivity is low in African countries, prompting governments to try a number of active policies to improve it. Yet despite the millions of dollars spent on these policies, we are far from a situation where we know whether many of them are yielding the desired payoffs. This paper establishes some basic facts about the number and heterogeneity of firms in different sub-Saharan African countries and discusses their implications for experimental and structural approaches towards trying to estimate firm policy impacts. It shows that the typical firm program such as a matching grant scheme or business training program involves only 100 to 300 firms, which are often very heterogeneous in terms of employment and sales levels. As a result, standard experimental designs will lack any power to detect reasonable sized treatment impacts, while structural models which assume common production technologies and few missing markets will be ill-suited to capture the key constraints firms face. Nevertheless, the author suggests a way forward which involves focusing on a more homogeneous sub-sample of firms and collecting a lot more data on them than is typically collected.

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