Volume 6, Issue 2-3 p. 487-500

PUTTING A BAND-AID ON A CORPSE: INCENTIVES FOR NURSES IN THE INDIAN PUBLIC HEALTH CARE SYSTEM

Abhijit V. Banerjee,

Corresponding Author

Abhijit V. Banerjee

MIT and Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab

banerjee@mit.edu

eduflo@mit.edu

rglenner@mit.edu

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Esther Duflo,

Corresponding Author

Esther Duflo

MIT and Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab

banerjee@mit.edu

eduflo@mit.edu

rglenner@mit.edu

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Rachel Glennerster,

Corresponding Author

Rachel Glennerster

MIT and Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab

banerjee@mit.edu

eduflo@mit.edu

rglenner@mit.edu

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First published: 13 December 2010
Citations: 11

Abstract

The public Indian health care system is plagued by high staff absence, low effort by providers, and limited use by potential beneficiaries who prefer private alternatives. This artice reports the results of an experiment carried out with a district administration and a nongovernmental organization (NGO). The presence of government nurses in government public health facilities (subcenters and aid-posts) was recorded by the NGO, and the government took steps to punish the worst delinquents. Initially, the monitoring system was extremely effective. This shows that nurses are responsive to financial incentives. But after a few months, the local health administration appears to have undermined the scheme from the inside by letting the nurses claim an increasing number of “exempt days.” Eighteen months after its inception, the program had become completely ineffective. (JEL: D10, I10, J30)

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