Cities which have adopted CitiStat as a diagnostic tool use the CitiStat process to assess and evaluate both the provision of municipal services and their efficient deployment. In this paper we analyze the impact and effectiveness of the CitiStat process on the delivery of municipal services by analyzing outcomes measures used by city governments to assess the effectiveness of services offered by local municipalities. These measures include, for example, facility use, attendance at city-sponsored events, government-sponsored programs designed to impact variously defined demographic groups (pre-teens, teenagers, adults, senior citizens, etc.), and revenues generated by municipal services and programs. For comparison purposes, a control group of cities not using CitiStat will be identified and benchmarked to CitiStat cities using a variety of measures, including efficient provision of services, efficacy and opacity of reporting processes, and citizen satisfaction of municipal services. City-by-city benchmarking is expected to identify methods which non-CitiStat municipalities might use to emulate the successes of cities using the CitiStat process to evaluate performance.
The present paper is exploratory in nature, and is intended to provide an overview of ongoing CitiStat programs and suggest an approach to evaluating these programs within an economic framework.