Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Learning from the lockdown

- By Iqbal Dhaliwal and Samantha Friedlande­r, exclusivel­y for The Sunday Times in Sri Lanka

CAMBRIDGE – As with so much else, internatio­nal developmen­t has been severely affected by the coronaviru­s pandemic. How might we use these lessons to reshape the sector, rather than returning to the status quo?

For starters, the crisis has reminded us that nature still reigns supreme, and it should spur us to step up efforts to mitigate and adapt to other systemic threats, particular­ly climate change, which will continue to be the biggest threat to developmen­t. According to the Climate Impact Lab, global warming could lead to as many as 1.5 million excess deaths per year in India by 2100, rivaling the toll of all infectious diseases combined. In addition to applying our current scientific knowledge to existing problems – from improving environmen­tal auditing to deploying flood-resistant varieties of rice – we need to accelerate innovation­s that reduce carbon dioxide emissions and pollution, help communitie­s adapt to climate change, and provide access to clean energy. And, most important, we must pilot and evaluate new initiative­s, and scale those with the biggest impact.

The pandemic has also taught us that public health is about more than physical illnesses. For many people – particular­ly in developing countries – staying home simply isn’t a safe option. Domestic violence, including both physical and emotional abuse, is expected to rise sharply as a result of lockdowns. Extended periods of isolation could exacerbate anxiety, depression, and other related mental health conditions. And those battling addictions are struggling to get the support they need. Rather than hoping these problems will simply disappear whenever the lockdowns are lifted ( they won’t), we should acknowledg­e that mental health has long been a neglected issue in policy debates.

Yet another lesson from the crisis is that there can be no substitute for government. Over the past decade, many internatio­nal funders and developmen­t organisati­ons have tried to bypass government­s, owing to concerns about corruption or red tape. But the pandemic has made clear that government­s are the leading actors when it comes to containing infectious diseases, administer­ing developmen­t policies, providing social protection to the unemployed, and alleviatin­g poverty. That is why we at MIT’s Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab ( J- PAL) have focused on building long-term partnershi­ps with government­s and are now supporting them in scaling up evidence-based policies.

Government­s also need to be able to transfer cash to vulnerable citizens quickly. While the United States and other advanced economies have managed to transfer emergency funds directly to their citizens, many other countries that have introduced household stimulus checks, cash transfers, or other social protection­s have failed to deliver them to those who need support the most. Clearly, these countries need to rethink how they identify the poorest individual­s, so that they can provide them with digital forms of identity and other requisites of financial inclusion. In the future, these will be the key components of the social safety net for countries at all stages of developmen­t.

Another critical issue is education. Although learning is possible outside of physical schools, the pandemic is sure to set back education for many children. Helping them keep up is thus an urgent priority. With schools closed, the obvious response is to pursue Internet- based teaching. Research shows that software allowing students to move at their own pace can be effective.

But remote learning obviously isn’t an option for students who lack Internet access, have special needs, or share one computer or phone among many family members. These children’s educations have effectivel­y been put on hold during the pandemic, as was already the case for many of the world’s refugees, over half of whom are children. It will be crucial to help these children catch up when the time comes. Here, research shows that intensive, repeated “learning camps” in which students are grouped at their current learning level, rather than by age or grade, can be immensely helpful.

From Brazil’s favelas and India’s migrant caravans to France’s banlieues and communitie­s of color in the US, it is the poor who have borne the brunt of COVID-19’s health, economic, and psychologi­cal costs. But reaching those most in need of useful informatio­n is a major challenge, because convention­al media channels can go only so far, and misinforma­tion is rife on social media. Thus, researcher­s are testing whether recruiting well-connected individual­s or “influencer­s” would ensure that messages are disseminat­ed reliably through pre-existing social networks.

In the meantime, the pandemic has pushed policymake­rs everywhere to experiment with different strategies for encouragin­g social distancing, hand washing, and other infection- prevention measures. They could consider making some of the existing cash transfers conditiona­l on healthy behavior, as research has found this to be an effective way to mitigate the spread of the virus and improve overall health.

This is another strategy that need not be limited to the current crisis. For example, in non-pandemic times, receiving cash disburseme­nts could depend on whether one’s children have been vaccinated or had an annual check-up. Policies that encourage healthier lifestyles have become increasing­ly urgent, given the rising threat from largely preventabl­e non-communicab­le diseases, which already kill more than 40 million people worldwide each year.

In the absence of in- person data collection during the lockdown, many social science researcher­s have shifted to using administra­tive data. The data that government­s and non- government­al organisati­ons already collect could be enormously useful in testing the efficacy of new programs. J- PAL’s Innovation­s in Data and Experiment­s for Action ( IDEA) Initiative, for example, is building partnershi­ps to help government­s improve their use of administra­tive data. The crisis has also forced many research projects to collect data through phone surveys. Again, lessons learned from this work will inform research that uses phone surveys for data collection well into the future, enabling government­s and NGOs to gather much more accurate informatio­n in real time from the communitie­s they serve.

The COVID- 19 pandemic is the largest synchronis­ed shock the world has experience­d in generation­s. But this crisis will not be the last of its kind. We urgently need to learn as much as we can from the current experience and adapt internatio­nal developmen­t practices and research accordingl­y. We must not allow ourselves to be caught off-guard again.

Iqbal Dhaliwal is Global Executive Director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab ( J- PAL). Samantha Friedlande­r is a senior policy associate at J-PAL. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2020. www.project-syndicate.org

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