Working Paper: NBER ID: w28406
Authors: Monica P. Bhatt; Jonathan Guryan; Jens Ludwig; Anuj K. Shah
Abstract: Over the past 50 years, social science has increasingly become involved in the business of not just understanding social problems, but of helping solve them as well. Progress towards this goal will benefit not just from the growing work on solving the challenge of scale, by which we mean the capacity to effectively reach large numbers of people, but also from more attention to the less-appreciated challenge of scope, by which we mean the capacity to change a large share of the decisions that affect a given person’s outcomes. In this essay, we provide a simple framework to help think about the scope of candidate policies, and highlight some common situations that are often associated with potential for large scope.
Keywords: social impact; policy interventions; scope; scale
JEL Codes: A1; Z18
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
BAM program (C87) | reduced violent crime arrests (K42) |
BAM program (C87) | sustained gains in high school graduation rates (I21) |
changing cafeteria layouts (L68) | increased share of healthy food consumed by children (D18) |
changing cafeteria layouts (L68) | impact on obesity rates (I14) |