We
present here two papers which argue that the existing
models underlying the strategies to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) are deficient and flawed
on a number of counts. The authors, Sanjay Reddy and
Antoine Heuty, propose an alternate approach to achieving
the MDGs through a process of periodic peer and partner
review. According to the authors, the process of peer
and partner review will enable each country to learn
from its own experience and that of other countries
and thereby increases the likelihood of success.
- Achieving
The Millennium Development Goals: What’s Wrong with
Existing Analytical Models?
(PDF Document , Size: 271 Kb, App. Download Time:
04 min @ 28kbps)
Sanjay Reddy and Antoine Heuty
Effective strategic choices for achieving the MDGs
must be based on sound assessments of the costs
and benefits of alternative policies. However, existing
approaches to identifying these costs and benefits
are unreliable. In particular, estimates of the
costs and benefits of alternative strategies derive
from implausible and restrictive assumptions, often
depend on poor quality data, and are presented without
adequate recognition of the presence of uncertainties
concerning the future. These weaknesses of existing
approaches can be mitigated but not overcome. An
alternative to the technocratic approach to strategic
planning is needed, in view of the potential damage
from the use of erroneous analytical models.
- Peer
and Partner Review: A Practical Approach to achieving
the MDGs
(PDF Document , Size: 136Kb,
App. Download Time: 02 min @ 28kbps)
Sanjay Reddy and Antoine Heuty
A number of strategies to achieve the MDGs have
recently been proposed, most influentially by the
Millennium Project, the World Bank and the United
Nations. The models underlying the recommended strategies
are flawed, as a result of their reliance on implausible
and restrictive assumptions and poor quality data
and their failure adequately to reflect uncertainties
about the future. These weaknesses of technocratic
predictive models can be mitigated but not overcome.
An alternative approach to strategic planning should
establish an institutional framework for continuous
informed policy choice by representative decision-makers.
The alternative approach to achieving the MDGs can
be implemented through a process of periodic peer
and partner review. The process of peer and partner
review will enable each country to learn from its
own experience and that of other countries and thereby
increases the likelihood of success.
Updated July 20, 2005. |