Does involvement of local NGOs enhance public service delivery? Cautionary evidence from a malaria-prevention program in India.

Abstract:

:Partnerships between government and non-state actors that aim to enhance the quality or efficiency of service delivery are increasingly common in today's development policy landscape. We investigate the impacts of such an approach using data from an experimental supportive intervention to India's malaria control program that leveraged local non-state capacity in order to promote mosquito net usage and recommended fever care-seeking patterns. The supportive activities were conducted simultaneously by 3 NGOs, contracted out by the Indian government, in 2 endemic districts in the state of Odisha. We find that program impact significantly varied by location. Examining 3 potential sources of this variation (differential population characteristics, differential health worker characteristics, and differential implementer characteristics), we provide evidence that both population and NGO characteristics significantly affected the success of the program. Specifically, the results suggest that the quality and effort of the local implementer played a key role in the differential effectiveness. We discuss these findings as they relate to the external validity of development policy evaluations and, specifically, for the ability of health and other service delivery systems to benefit from limited non-state capacity in underresourced areas.

journal_name

Health Econ

journal_title

Health economics

authors

Das A,Friedman J,Kandpal E

doi

10.1002/hec.3529

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2018-01-01 00:00:00

pages

172-188

issue

1

eissn

1057-9230

issn

1099-1050

journal_volume

27

pub_type

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