A 'Politically Robust' Experimental Design for Public Policy Evaluation, With Application to the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Program
Gary King, Emmanuela Gakidou, Nirmala Ravishankar, Ryan Moore, Jason Lakin, Manett Vargas, Martha María Téllez-Rojo, Juan Eugenio Hernández Ávila, Mauricio Hernández Ávila, Héctor Hernández Llamas. 2007.
"A 'Politically Robust' Experimental Design for Public Policy Evaluation, With Application to the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Program".
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 26, Pp. 479-506.

Abstract
We develop an approach to conducting large scale randomized public policy experiments intended to be more robust to the political interventions that have ruined some or all parts of many similar previous efforts. Our proposed design is insulated from selection bias in some circumstances even if we lose observations and our inferences can still be unbiased even if politics disrupts any two of the three steps in our analytical procedures and and other empirical checks are available to validate the overall design. We illustrate with a design and empirical validation of an evaluation of the Mexican Seguro Popular de Salud (Universal Health Insurance) program we are conducting. Seguro Popular, which is intended to grow to provide medical care, drugs, preventative services, and financial health protection to the 50 million Mexicans without health insurance, is one of the largest health reforms of any country in the last two decades. The evaluation is also large scale, constituting one of the largest policy experiments to date and what may be the largest randomized health policy experiment ever.
See Also
- [Paper] Do Nonpartisan Programmatic Policies Have Partisan Electoral Effects? Evidence from Two Large Scale Experiments (2020)
- [Paper] Matched Pairs and the Future of Cluster-Randomized Experiments: A Rejoinder (2009)
- [Paper] Public Policy for the Poor? A Randomised Assessment of the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Programme (2009)
- [Dataset] Replication Data For: Public Policy for the Poor? A Randomised Assessment of the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Programme (2009)
- [Paper] The Essential Role of Pair Matching in Cluster-Randomized Experiments, With Application to the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Evaluation (2009)
- [Presentation] A 'Politically Robust' Experimental Design for Public Policy Evaluation, With Application to the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Program (2007)
- [Presentation] Public Policy for the Poor? A Randomized Evaluation of the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Program (Harvard School of Public Health) (2022)
- [Presentation] Public Policy for the Poor? A Randomized Evaluation of the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Program (2014)