Value for Money (VfM) is an essential tool for balancing difficult policy and programme decisions and the trade-offs between the ‘5 Es’ of economy, efficiency, effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and equity. While many of the conceptual approaches to VfM and methods for estimation are similar in regular development programming for social protection and humanitarian cash and food assistance, these literatures have so far evolved in fairly distinct silos. There has been relatively little work so far to bring the two strands together. In fragile and conflict-affected settings, the gaps are especially great. A lack of cost and basic programme implementation data hinders understanding of economy and efficiency, while gaps in robust...
Targeting social assistance in situations of protracted conflict, protracted displacement, or recurr...
This brief highlights a number of targeting considerations that are unique to, or intensified by, ...
A value for money (VfM) tool was used to better understand the input to process and output to result...
Value for Money (VfM) is an essential tool for balancing difficult policy and programme decisions. W...
Value for Money (VfM) is a concept that broadly defines how to maximise and sustain equitable and qu...
This CDI Practice Paper* by Julian Barr and Angela Christie brings together recent work at Itad to ...
Global financial crisis, austerity measures, intensified public and government scrutiny over an incr...
This article opens a new research pathway by examining value-for-money (VFM) in the charity sector. ...
© 2019 Dr. Julian Challis KingThere is increasing scrutiny on social investments to determine whethe...
There is consensus in the literature that giving people cash in humanitarian contexts provides great...
This paper examines the role of cash-plus programming (including graduation) for livelihoods, income...
This practice note combines key theoretical principles of value-for-money (VfM) assessment with the ...
This report provides an update to a set of previous helpdesk reports by the Knowledge, Evidence and ...
French version available in IDRC Digital Library: Optimisation des ressources : risques et possibili...
In recent times, there has been an increasing drive to demonstrate value for money (VfM) for investm...
Targeting social assistance in situations of protracted conflict, protracted displacement, or recurr...
This brief highlights a number of targeting considerations that are unique to, or intensified by, ...
A value for money (VfM) tool was used to better understand the input to process and output to result...
Value for Money (VfM) is an essential tool for balancing difficult policy and programme decisions. W...
Value for Money (VfM) is a concept that broadly defines how to maximise and sustain equitable and qu...
This CDI Practice Paper* by Julian Barr and Angela Christie brings together recent work at Itad to ...
Global financial crisis, austerity measures, intensified public and government scrutiny over an incr...
This article opens a new research pathway by examining value-for-money (VFM) in the charity sector. ...
© 2019 Dr. Julian Challis KingThere is increasing scrutiny on social investments to determine whethe...
There is consensus in the literature that giving people cash in humanitarian contexts provides great...
This paper examines the role of cash-plus programming (including graduation) for livelihoods, income...
This practice note combines key theoretical principles of value-for-money (VfM) assessment with the ...
This report provides an update to a set of previous helpdesk reports by the Knowledge, Evidence and ...
French version available in IDRC Digital Library: Optimisation des ressources : risques et possibili...
In recent times, there has been an increasing drive to demonstrate value for money (VfM) for investm...
Targeting social assistance in situations of protracted conflict, protracted displacement, or recurr...
This brief highlights a number of targeting considerations that are unique to, or intensified by, ...
A value for money (VfM) tool was used to better understand the input to process and output to result...