Data‑driven policy evaluation in action
A 2024 OECD Policy Outlook found that countries with robust ex‑ante evaluation processes are 40% more likely to meet their policy targets. Yet the same report notes that only one‑third of member countries systematically link budget allocations to evidence. Meanwhile, the World Bank's Global Delivery Initiative has documented over 1,000 cases where iterative, data‑driven delivery units accelerated outcomes — from reducing maternal mortality in Ethiopia to cutting business registration times in North Macedonia.
Mapping inputs → activities → outputs → outcomes → impact clarifies assumptions and reveals gaps. The UK Magenta Book (2020, updated 2025) mandates logic models for all major spending proposals. Canada's Treasury Board Secretariat requires them for every new programme submission — a practice that has improved accountability ratings by 22 percentage points since 2019.
Policymakers often lack months for a full systematic review. REAs deliver a snapshot of what we already know within 4–6 weeks. The What Works Network in the UK has published over 150 REAs since 2021, slashing the time from research question to actionable insight. The African Evidence Network trained 2,000+ civil servants in REA methods during 2024 alone.
From India's NITI Aayog (over 100 RCTs in education and health) to the US Office of Evaluation Sciences (embedding RCTs in federal programmes), experiments show what works. In Kenya, an RCT on digital school‑fee subsidies revealed that sending reminders via SMS to mothers increased timely payments by 28% — a near‑zero‑cost intervention now scaled nationally.
Linking tax, health, labour, and education records creates a 360‑degree view without costly new surveys. Estonia's Data Tracker enables near‑real‑time monitoring of policy outcomes, cutting evaluation costs by 60%. South Korea's Government Integrated Data Analysis Center supports 250+ projects yearly, from targeting welfare to predicting industrial accidents.
Evidence isn't just statistics. OECD's "Civic Space" reports emphasise participatory evidence. Finland's citizen panels, informed by expert briefings, have shaped national climate targets. Colombia's Medellín Cómo Vamos programme uses citizen perception surveys — now backed by machine‑learning sentiment analysis — to adjust urban policies every quarter.
Evidence‑based policymaking is not about chasing perfect data; it's about building a culture that asks "How do we know?" before acting. The five tools above offer a starting point that any ministry or agency can adapt.
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Sources: OECD Policy Outlook 2024, World Bank Global Delivery Initiative, UK Magenta Book (2025), African Evidence Network Annual Report 2024, What Works Network UK, NITI Aayog India.