Wednesday, 26 March 2008

Hitting the target, missing the point,



According to a fascinating new piece of research from New Economics Foundation,regeneration programmes are failing to reduce inequalities because they are good at measuring things that make no difference to the lives of local people. And are poor at measuring things that do.

The New Economics Foundation report, published this week, said government was repeating mistakes of the past because it had never fully challenged two key assumptions.

One, that outputs provide a true measure of change and two, that there is a direct cause and effect relationship between investment and the achievement of policy objectives. These assumptions are reflected in performance measures that exaggerate the success of initiatives and perpetuate their weaknesses time and again.
The report showed how government measures focus on objectives that are either unrealistic or totally miss the point.
Full employment targets, for example, dominate programmes but are often irrelevant for people who have been excluded for a long time from the labour market and need to build their confidence in order to progress. ‘Too often indicators and performance measures are set in isolation from both the people who will be using them and those for whom they are meant to work.
Stakeholders often find that the measures being applied are not even relevant, let alone useful. The think tank concluded: ‘There is still a significant gap in the evidence about what works in relation to economic development policy. It is essential that policy becomes more informed and less political if we are to build the evidence base and use public investment as effectively as possible to combat inequality.’

For full report go to,Hitting the target, missing the point, http://www.neweconomics.org/

3 comments:

community philosopher said...

isn't this was some very perceptive people have been saying for quite a while? Its getting the reality indicators accepted by the people in charge of evaluating these projects.
Tick a box mentality is no way to measure distance travelled by people, or identifying what triggers regeneration.

Anonymous said...

question is will the politicians have the courage to change thier obsession with targets, im not sure they can, as the saying goes when you in a hole stop digging.

Robert said...

Or keep digging and hope you come out in AUstralia.