In 'Improving Police Performance in Rajasthan, India: Experimental Evidence on Incentives, Managerial Autonomy, and Training,' published in the American Economic Journal in February 2021, SAGE Academic Committee member Abhijit Banerjee, along with co-authors Raghabendra Chattopadhyay, Esther Duflo, Daniel Keniston, and Nina Singh, examine optimal practices in hierarchical government organizations. Read the full paper here (AEA membership or institutional access required).
Abstract
Management matters for firms, but what practices are optimal in
hierarchical government organizations? And can skilled managers identify
them? A large-scale randomized trial conducted with the police of
Rajasthan, India, tested four interventions recommended by senior police
officers: limitations of transfers, rotation of duties and days off,
increased community involvement, and on-duty training. Field experience
motivated a fifth intervention: 'decoy' visits by enumerators to
register cases, incentivizing staff to improve service. Only training
and decoy visits had robust impacts; others were poorly implemented and
ineffective. Management reforms can improve policing, but even skilled
leaders struggle to identify the optimal interventions.