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Data for Development

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  • Independent Evaluation Group

Abstract

This evaluation’s objective was to assess how effectively the World Bank has supported development data production, sharing, and use, and to suggest ways to improve its approach. This evaluation defines development data as data produced by country systems, the World Bank, or third parties on countries’ social, economic, and environmental issues. At the global level, the World Bank has a strong reputation in development data and has been highly effective in data production. It produces influential, widely used data and cross-country indicators that fill important niches, benchmark countries, and stimulate research and policy action. The World Bank has also taken a prominent leadership role in global data partnerships so far. However, the World Bank needs to determine its future role carefully because the global partnership landscape is becoming more uncertain—as old partnerships phase out, the complementarity of new partnerships is unclear. This makes the World Bank’s future role especially pivotal because the sustainability of funding from global data partnerships at both the national level and for some global data efforts is at risk. Without sustained funding, past progress will be in jeopardy, as observed in some countries where data quality worsened when trust fund support ended. At the national level, the World Bank has been mostly effective at fostering its client countries’ data production through its own financing and through financing from small trust fund grants. It has been less effective in promoting data sharing; while the World Bank has used its leverage in some of its client countries, it needs to do a better job at encouraging other countries to share data. The World Bank has been even less effective in promoting data use by governments and citizens. The World Bank’s systemwide approach to building the capacity of national statistical organizations yielded significant successes in countries where it was deployed, and it should now add a focus on building subnational capacity and strengthening client countries’ administrative data systems. The World Bank needs to make sure it clearly understands when and how big data can complement traditional data in answering key development questions related to its mission, and use big data analytics appropriately to underpin its own decisions and to ensure that it supports its country clients effectively in big data use. The World Bank still needs to address the implications for organizing big data work internally, entering into corporate agreements with private providers (typically the producers of big data), and seriously considering and addressing privacy and ethical concerns related to big data use.

Suggested Citation

  • Independent Evaluation Group, 2017. "Data for Development," World Bank Publications - Books, The World Bank Group, number 28485.
  • Handle: RePEc:wbk:wbpubs:28485
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Chakraborty, Adrij, 2017. "Colonial Origins and Comparative Development: Institutions Matter," MPRA Paper 86320, University Library of Munich, Germany, revised Feb 2018.
    2. S. M. Niaz Arifin & Christoph Zimmer & Caroline Trotter & Anaïs Colombini & Fati Sidikou & F. Marc LaForce & Ted Cohen & Reza Yaesoubi, 2019. "Cost-Effectiveness of Alternative Uses of Polyvalent Meningococcal Vaccines in Niger: An Agent-Based Transmission Modeling Study," Medical Decision Making, , vol. 39(5), pages 553-567, July.
    3. Adrian Tiong Weng, 2017. "Leadership and Communication in HCMC, Vietnam," International Journal of Business and Management, Canadian Center of Science and Education, vol. 12(6), pages 111-111, May.
    4. Heejung Park & William Martin, 2022. "Effects of risk tolerance, financial literacy, and financial status on retirement planning," Journal of Financial Services Marketing, Palgrave Macmillan, vol. 27(3), pages 167-176, September.
    5. Miren Gutierrez & John Bryant, 2022. "The Fading Gloss of Data Science: Towards an Agenda that Faces the Challenges of Big Data for Development and Humanitarian Action," Development, Palgrave Macmillan;Society for International Deveopment, vol. 65(1), pages 80-93, March.
    6. Silvia Loi & Daniela Vono de Vilhena, 2020. "Exclusion through statistical invisibility. An exploration on what can be known through publicly available datasets on irregular migration and the health status of this population in Germany," MPIDR Working Papers WP-2020-009, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany.
    7. Vanegas Cantarero, María Mercedes, 2018. "Reviewing the Nicaraguan transition to a renewable energy system: Why is “business-as-usual” no longer an option?," Energy Policy, Elsevier, vol. 120(C), pages 580-592.
    8. Daniela Craveiro & Isabel Tiago de Oliveira & Maria Cristina Sousa Gomes & Jorge Malheiros & Maria João Guardado Moreira & João Peixoto, 2019. "Back to replacement migration: A new European perspective applying the prospective-age concept," Demographic Research, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany, vol. 40(45), pages 1323-1344.
    9. MacFeely Steve, 2017. "Measuring the Sustainable Development Goals: What does it mean for Ireland?," Administration, Sciendo, vol. 65(4), pages 41-71, December.
    10. Irma Convertino & Stefano Salvadori & Alessandro Pecori & Maria Teresa Galiulo & Sara Ferraro & Maria Parrilli & Tiberio Corona & Giuseppe Turchetti & Corrado Blandizzi & Marco Tuccori, 2019. "Potential Direct Costs of Adverse Drug Events and Possible Cost Savings Achievable by their Prevention in Tuscany, Italy: A Model-Based Analysis," Drug Safety, Springer, vol. 42(3), pages 427-444, March.
    11. Leena Bhattacharya, 2019. "Short-Term Migration and Children’s School Attendance: Evidence from Rural India," The Indian Journal of Labour Economics, Springer;The Indian Society of Labour Economics (ISLE), vol. 62(4), pages 659-691, December.
    12. Löschel, Andreas & Großkurth, Philipp & Colombier, Michel & Criqui, Patrick & Xiangwan, Du & Frei, Christoph & Gethmann, Carl Friedrich & Gummer, John & Lecocq, Franck & Parikh, Jyoti K. & Sauer, Dirk, 2018. "Establishing an expert advisory commission to assist the G20's energy transformation processes," Economics - The Open-Access, Open-Assessment E-Journal (2007-2020), Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel), vol. 12, pages 1-13.
    13. Chakamera, Chengete & Alagidede, Paul, 2018. "Electricity crisis and the effect of CO2 emissions on infrastructure-growth nexus in Sub Saharan Africa," Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, Elsevier, vol. 94(C), pages 945-958.
    14. Paolo Abarcar & Emilie Bagby & Galina Lapadatova & Caroline Lauver & Audrey Moore & Matt Sloan, "undated". "Evaluation Design Report for the Secondary Education Activity of the Morocco Education & Training Project," Mathematica Policy Research Reports db1244ba7bc949119b09ffb57, Mathematica Policy Research.
    15. Ruben Smelik & Freek van Wermeskerken & Robbert Krijnen & Frido Kuijper, 2019. "Dynamic synthetic environments: a survey," The Journal of Defense Modeling and Simulation, , vol. 16(3), pages 255-271, July.
    16. Anthony Lehmann & Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer & Martin Lacayo & Grégory Giuliani & David Thau & Kevin Koy & Grace Goldberg & Richard Sharp Jr., 2017. "Lifting the Information Barriers to Address Sustainability Challenges with Data from Physical Geography and Earth Observation," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 9(5), pages 1-15, May.

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