The Indirect Approach

Aid and conditionalities are the "carrots and sticks" of the conventional, direct approach to fostering economic development. The economic theory of agency is the most sophisticated treatment of the direct carrots-and-sticks approach to i...

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Main Author: Ellerman, David
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/08/693240/indirect-approach
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19801
id okr-10986-19801
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-198012021-04-23T14:03:46Z The Indirect Approach Ellerman, David ACHIEVEMENT ACTIVE LEARNING ADAPTATION AIR ATTENTION BANDWIDTH BEHAVIOR CHANGE BELIEFS CALL ENGINEERING ENGINEERS INSTRUCTION INTELLIGENCE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS INTERVENTION LEARNING LEARNING CAPACITY LECTURES LET LITERATURE MANAGERS MEANING MODEM MOTIVATION PAPERS PARENTS PATIENTS PEDAGOGY PHILOSOPHY PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT PRINCIPALS PSYCHOLOGY PUPILS QUESTIONING RECOGNITION SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIOLOGY SPEAKING TEACHER TEACHING THERAPY THOUGHTS Aid and conditionalities are the "carrots and sticks" of the conventional, direct approach to fostering economic development. The economic theory of agency is the most sophisticated treatment of the direct carrots-and-sticks approach to influencing human behavior. Considering the outcomes of the conventional approach, it might be worthwhile to explore alternative indirect approaches that focus on enabling clients to act more autonomously, rather than try for fuller control of clients' actions (or "agents" behaviors) with improved carrots and sticks. Are there inherent limitations in the direct approach that will not be addressed with better crafted "agency contracts" or closer monitoring of the agents? The author traces the intellectual history of indirect approaches from Socrates to modern thinkers, such as Wittgenstein, Gandhi, and McGregor. One theme of his survey is that constructivist and active-learning pedagogies constitute an indirect approach in which the teacher does not directly transmit knowledge to the learner, through training, and instruction. These pedagogies - translated into social and economic development as learning writ large - from the basis for an alternative indirect approach to fostering development. Actions have motives, just as beliefs have grounds, concludes the author. In the wide spectrum of human endeavor, there is only a fairly small "bandwidth" in which motives can be supplied by the carrots, and sticks of the direct approach (including agency theory, and market-driven activities as special cases of the direct approach to affecting behavior). Outside that spectrum, trying to use direct methods in a controlling manner, contradicts the motives for actions (and the grounds for beliefs) - like trying to "buy love." For higher activities, motives must come from within. Helpers can at best use an indirect approach to bring doers to the threshold; the doers have to do the rest, which makes the results their own. 2014-08-27T21:42:18Z 2014-08-27T21:42:18Z 2000-08 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/08/693240/indirect-approach http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19801 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2417 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACHIEVEMENT
ACTIVE LEARNING
ADAPTATION
AIR
ATTENTION
BANDWIDTH
BEHAVIOR CHANGE
BELIEFS
CALL
ENGINEERING
ENGINEERS
INSTRUCTION
INTELLIGENCE
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
INTERVENTION
LEARNING
LEARNING CAPACITY
LECTURES
LET
LITERATURE
MANAGERS
MEANING
MODEM
MOTIVATION
PAPERS
PARENTS
PATIENTS
PEDAGOGY
PHILOSOPHY
PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT
PRINCIPALS
PSYCHOLOGY
PUPILS
QUESTIONING
RECOGNITION
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
SOCIOLOGY
SPEAKING
TEACHER
TEACHING
THERAPY
THOUGHTS
spellingShingle ACHIEVEMENT
ACTIVE LEARNING
ADAPTATION
AIR
ATTENTION
BANDWIDTH
BEHAVIOR CHANGE
BELIEFS
CALL
ENGINEERING
ENGINEERS
INSTRUCTION
INTELLIGENCE
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
INTERVENTION
LEARNING
LEARNING CAPACITY
LECTURES
LET
LITERATURE
MANAGERS
MEANING
MODEM
MOTIVATION
PAPERS
PARENTS
PATIENTS
PEDAGOGY
PHILOSOPHY
PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT
PRINCIPALS
PSYCHOLOGY
PUPILS
QUESTIONING
RECOGNITION
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
SOCIOLOGY
SPEAKING
TEACHER
TEACHING
THERAPY
THOUGHTS
Ellerman, David
The Indirect Approach
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2417
description Aid and conditionalities are the "carrots and sticks" of the conventional, direct approach to fostering economic development. The economic theory of agency is the most sophisticated treatment of the direct carrots-and-sticks approach to influencing human behavior. Considering the outcomes of the conventional approach, it might be worthwhile to explore alternative indirect approaches that focus on enabling clients to act more autonomously, rather than try for fuller control of clients' actions (or "agents" behaviors) with improved carrots and sticks. Are there inherent limitations in the direct approach that will not be addressed with better crafted "agency contracts" or closer monitoring of the agents? The author traces the intellectual history of indirect approaches from Socrates to modern thinkers, such as Wittgenstein, Gandhi, and McGregor. One theme of his survey is that constructivist and active-learning pedagogies constitute an indirect approach in which the teacher does not directly transmit knowledge to the learner, through training, and instruction. These pedagogies - translated into social and economic development as learning writ large - from the basis for an alternative indirect approach to fostering development. Actions have motives, just as beliefs have grounds, concludes the author. In the wide spectrum of human endeavor, there is only a fairly small "bandwidth" in which motives can be supplied by the carrots, and sticks of the direct approach (including agency theory, and market-driven activities as special cases of the direct approach to affecting behavior). Outside that spectrum, trying to use direct methods in a controlling manner, contradicts the motives for actions (and the grounds for beliefs) - like trying to "buy love." For higher activities, motives must come from within. Helpers can at best use an indirect approach to bring doers to the threshold; the doers have to do the rest, which makes the results their own.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Ellerman, David
author_facet Ellerman, David
author_sort Ellerman, David
title The Indirect Approach
title_short The Indirect Approach
title_full The Indirect Approach
title_fullStr The Indirect Approach
title_full_unstemmed The Indirect Approach
title_sort indirect approach
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/08/693240/indirect-approach
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19801
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