Using phone surveys to improve public service delivery and guide crisis response—Insights from J-PAL South Asia

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Regular program monitoring is critical for improving public service delivery and ensuring that benefits reach intended populations to improve their lives. However, in low- and middle-income countries, monitoring is often constrained by slow, indirect processes such as periodic government surveys as well as unrepresentative, sporadic data from government dashboards and grievance redressal systems.

Research finds that directly calling program beneficiaries and collecting their feedback not only offers a cost-effective way to generate real-time data to improve program implementation, but can also help motivate frontline workers to perform their duties more effectively. Increasingly, and particularly in the fast-changing context of the Covid-19 crisis, phone surveys are emerging as a means for service providers to collect regular, representative data, quickly identify gaps in relief activities, and deploy essential resources where required.

In this lecture-based webinar, researchers Gaurav Chiplunkar (University of Virginia, J-PAL invited researcher) and Kartik Srivastava (PhD candidate, Harvard University) will discuss the potential of phone surveys in building stronger, more responsive M&E systems, the versatility of their uses, and the operational and technical challenges that they pose. Drawing from their experience using phone surveys to improve the last-mile delivery of public services, the speakers will present two case studies: Using phone surveys to monitor the state of Telangana’s farmer income support scheme in a pre-pandemic setting; and leveraging phone surveys to guide the government’s real-time crisis response in Delhi after the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.


Orador/a

Nome Título Biography
Gaurav Chiplunkar Assistant Professor of Business Administration Gaurav Chiplunkar’s research examines the impact of labour market frictions on firms and workers, and how policy reforms and new technologies may help mitigate them. He also works with the Payments and Governance Research Program at J-PAL South Asia on governance and public service delivery issues.
Kartik Srivastava PhD Candidate Kartik Srivastava’s research interests include development and labor economics, and political economy. Earlier, he worked at J-PAL South Asia with the Payments and Governance Research Program and then at the World Bank in Washington, DC. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Yale University.

Tópicos e Temas

Acadêmicos NA-Government Officials NA-Non-Profit Organizers NA-Private Sector NA-General Public NA-Policymakers/Parliamentarians NA-Evaluation Practitioners

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