The COVID-19 pandemic has called on governments to address complex and uncertain issues in a volatile context, with coherent, strategic and forward-looking manner. The OECD supports Members in driving the twin green and digital transitions, while ensuring social cohesion, social mobility and equality of opportunity to optimise the strength and quality of the recovery. This will require strong government capability and policy coherence driven from the Centre of Government in the domestic context, as well as in cross-border co-operation.
Public policymaking
The OECD helps governments tackle post-COVID challenges, prioritising strategic governance for green transitions, social cohesion, and equality. Reinforcing global commitments through capable governments is crucial. For effective governance and international cooperation, maintaining an impartial public service is vital. Governments, pressured to demonstrate outcomes and implement well-being-improving policies, need evidence-informed decision-making. Despite available evidence through public policy evaluation, its utilisation often remains challenging for governments.
Key messages
Responding to global commitments, including those encapsulated by the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the Sustainable Development Goals to keep the UN2030 Agenda on track will also require strengthening government capability and policy coherence. Coherence is critical to ensure mutually reinforcing policies at different levels of government to address global challenges.
Governments are under increased pressure to show that their use of public resources and the decisions they make translate into desired outcomes, and to implement policies that actually improve the well-being of people. Tackling these challenges requires decision-making informed by robust and credible evidence. By bringing an objective understanding of what works, why, for whom, and under what circumstances, public policy evaluation provides such crucial evidence to decision-makers and citizens. Yet, use of evaluation results often remains fundamentally difficult for governments.
Context
OECD Framework for Evaluating COVID-19 Responses
This OECD framework identifies three main types of policy responses that governments need to evaluate to better understand what has
worked well and what has not in managing the pandemic. These three main policy responses correspond to the major phases of the risk management cycle: pandemic preparedness, crisis management, and response and recovery.
Challenges centres of government face in co-ordination and policy development
Centres of government (CoGs) contribute to democratic resilience is by promoting whole-of-government policy responses that overcome traditional administrative barriers. The emergence of cross-cutting policy challenges such as climate change, rising social inequality and migration can no longer be addressed in silos and, as such, have proved challenging for governments. supporting good public governance through co-ordination and policy development support touches a wide range of challenging areas for the CoG, including in particular operationalising long-term policy issues and prioritisation and trade-offs. By breaking down silos, fostering collaboration and ensuring coherent government actions, CoGs help governments reduce the risk of fragmented actions, duplication and low quality of services, and difficulty in meeting government goals and international commitments.
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