From IPA Team <[email protected]>
Subject Video: Nobel Prize Winner Esther Duflo on Why IPA Matters
Date November 10, 2020 6:25 PM
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Evidence has never been more important.

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More evidence, less poverty

Hi John,

After winning the Nobel Prize about a year ago, Esther Duflo talked about IPA’s role in building the movement behind the prize, how IPA has provided the “research infrastructure” to evaluate hundreds of potential solutions to poverty, and she championed the global community's progress in reducing extreme poverty.

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One year later, the world is in a very different place. The World Bank projects that COVID-19 could push 150 million more people into extreme poverty. Meanwhile, the economic downturn means governments are slashing aid budgets.

Ensuring that limited funds are used effectively to tackle poverty has never been more critical. This is why IPA matters now more than ever. And this is why IPA is leveraging our reach with 57 projects on 4 continents, informing 30+ government ministries' policy responses to COVID-19. These include:

Are people following social distancing guidelines? If not, what can be done? In densely packed Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh in April, we found

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three-quarters of the people we were tracking had gone to a religious gathering in the previous week. With this information, the government began working with religious leaders to help share COVID-safety messaging, and we are embarking on new work to evaluate ways to increase mask usage.

To what extent do cash transfers shield households from the impacts of the crisis? We’ve run studies on giving cash to the poor

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, and now that governments need to get cash out to lots of people very quickly, many lessons we've learned are doubly important. We’re working with several governments to find and help the hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of the newly poor.

How can governments ensure remote learning reaches kids and prevent kids from dropping out of school? With schools closed, our government partners in Peru need to know if their TV, radio, and internet remote-learning tools are working

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. They are also quickly scaling up a program we’d already shown

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prevents dropouts.

As we reflect back on the past year, Esther’s words that “It shouldn’t be about ideology, it shouldn’t be about intuition” but rather about evidence, ring more true than ever.

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Thank you for joining us in creating a world with more evidence and less poverty—your support has never been so important.

Best wishes,

The IPA Team

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