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The Impact of Cash Transfer Programs in sub- Saharan Africa: Evidence from the Transfer Project Sudhanshu Handa UNICEF Office of Research-Innocenti https://transfer.cpc.unc.edu/ Outline 1.Overview on development oriented cash transfers in SSA 2.Summary of impacts – claims and ‘myth busters’ 3.The future agenda for programming and research
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Social Protection is thriving in Africa Focusing on cash transfer programs alone – >120 programs across the continent of all kinds (Garcia & Moore 2012) – ~30 long-term development programs in 20 countries Programs are ‘home-grown’ – Target on poverty and vulnerability; greater role of community – Unconditional or ‘soft conditions’ – Larger evidence base on impacts than any other region: more countries, more topics
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Cash Transfer Programs in Sub-Saharan Africa: The ‘quiet’ revolution 3 No CTs After 2004 Prior to 2004 No data
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Households covered in selected programs (RSA excluded; ETH direct beneficiaries only) Rapid scale-up in last year
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Transfer Project: Regional initiative to study impact of CTs in SSA Led by UNICEF with partner governments – FAO on productive impacts and local economy Rigorous evaluations of national programs – Technical support, design, analysis, policy dialogue SSA now has largest evidence base on cash transfers anywhere in the world – Over a dozen rigorous evaluations – In SSA, we no longer need to refer to the “Latin American evidence on CCTs”
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Malawi SCT Zimbabwe HSCT Unique demographic structure of recipient households in OVC and labor-constrained models (missing prime-ages)
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Labor-constrained criterion selects unique households: Zambia Zambia SCT HouseholdsRural Ultra-Poor LCMS 2010
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Kalabo Districts – 12+ hours by car from Lusaka Suspicious characters Kaputa District – 20+ hours by car from Lusaka
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Beneficiary, Migori District, Kenya (missing generation family) Beneficiary, Serenje District, Zambia (missing generation family) (household’s water source)
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How much do programs pay? Benefit structure and level in selected programs (US$) # membersGhana LEAP Malawi SCT MOZ PSA Zimbabwe HSCT Kenya CT- OVC Zambia SCT 1 person82.8371015 flat12 flat 29.503.66915 3114.831120 4+13.256.1713.5025 Beneficiary consumption pp per day 0.620.340.500.850.700.30 ZAM: $24 if disabled member MLW: 0.83 and 1.67 top-up per child in primary and secondary school respectively
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Among other things, impact depends on transfer size Widespread impact Selective impact % or per capita consumption
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Claim: Cash is ‘wasted’ on alcohol and tobacco Alcohol & tobacco represent 1 percent of budget share Across seven countries, no positive impacts observed on alcohol and tobacco – Data comes from detailed consumption modules covering over 250 individual items Alternative measurement approaches yield same result – “Has alcohol consumption increased in this community over the last year?”
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Big impacts on food security, consumption or diet diversity Ghana*10pp reduction in proportion of children missing a meal for an entire day Ethiopia12% increase in diet diversity; 150 calories per week increase in food (6%) Lesotho11pp reduction in proportion of children who had to eat fewer meals because of food shortage; reduction by 1.5 in number of months hhld had extreme shortage of food Malawi30% increase in consumption; 60pp increase in proportion of households eating meat or fish (diet diversity) Kenya10% increase in consumption (and improved diet diversity) Zambia CGP30% increase in consumption (and improved diet diversity) Zimbabwe8% increase in consumption; 10% increase in diet diversity
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Claim: Cash not used for productive activity or investment, just a ‘hand-out’
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School enrollment impacts among secondary age children strong, equal to those from CCTs in Latin America All Girls only Primary enrollment already high, impacts at secondary level
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Grade 3 math test – Serenje District, Zambia
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Households invest in productive activities: impact varies by country, transfer size, target group ZambiaEthiopiaMalawiZimLesothoKenyaGhana Agricultural inputs+++ NS++NS+++ Agricultural tools+++ NS Agricultural production +++ NS ++NS Livestock ownership+++ ++SmallNS Non farm enterprise+++NS +++NS+FHHNS Stronger impact Mixed impact Less impact NS=not significant
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Claim: Leads to laziness “I used to be a slave to ganyu (labour) but now I’m a bit free.” -elderly beneficiary, Malawi
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Reduction in casual wage labor, shift to on farm and more productive activities adultsZambiaKenyaMalawiEthiopiaZIMLesothoGhana Agricultural/casual wage labor - - - --NS Family farm+++ NS+++NS +++ Non farm business (NFE)+++ NS Non agricultural wage labor +++NS+++NS Shift from casual wage labour to family business— consistently reported in qualitative fieldwork
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Claim: Cannot be scaled up—not affordable Plausible simulations show average cost 1.1% of GDP or 4.4% of spending
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Claim: Lead to inflation In six countries, tested for inflation in intervention versus control communities using basket of ten goods – No inflationary effects found Why not? – Beneficiaries small share of community, typically 15-20 percent – Poorest households, low purchasing power, don’t buy enough to affect market prices
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In fact, cash transfers lead to multiplier effects in local economy!!
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Can it really be this good? Impacts on health inconsistent – Health expenditures increase, some increase in curative care, no consistent effects on illness No impacts on child nutritional status – In RSA, Zambia, positive impacts when mother has completed primary school – Determinants of nutrition complex, involve care, sanitation, water, disease environment and food – Weak health infrastructure in deep rural areas
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-13 pp impact*** Kenya and Zimbabwe impacts driven by girls, Malawi driven by boys. Zambia no impacts! -11 pp impact*** Meanwhile, emerging evidence that transfers enable safe-transition of adolescents into adulthood: Impacts on sexual debut among youth
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And beneficiaries are happier too-- consistent impacts on subjective well-being Ghana LEAP16pp increase in proportion reporting ‘yes’ to “Are you happy with your life?” Malawi SCT20pp increase in proportion ‘very satisfied’ with their life Kenya CT-OVC*6% increase in Quality of Life score Zambia CGP45% increase in proportion who believe ‘they are better off than 12 months ago’ Zambia Monze*10pp increase in proportion who feel ‘their life will be better in 2 years” Zimbabwe12% increase in subjective well-being scale
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What is on the future agenda? How can Sida help? Programming – Explicit links with social services (health insurance, school fee waivers) and where appropriate, agricultural and business services – Building comprehensive social protection system with cash transfers as the core – Policy and operational integration (MIS, targeting…) – Keep peddling or else you fall off
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What is on the future agenda? How can Sida help? Research and Evidence – Do we need yet another impact evaluation? Each country wants to know if it works in their context Well designed set of studies inform program design and operations – Rigorous research sends strong signal of professionalism – Keep peddling… The LAC model continues to dominate the discourse in certain places African model and evidence still not mainstreamed
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The (Innocenti) Transfer Project Team Amber Peterman [Gender/youth] Jacob de Hoop [Education/child labor] Sudhanshu (Ashu) Handa [Basically everything] Lisa Hjelm [Food security/ poverty & stress] Tia Palermo [Gender/youth] Michelle Mills [Research dissemination] Luisa Natali [Zambia/labor] Leah Principe [Zambia/ECD] Audrey Pereira [violence/ maternal health] Richard de Groot [Education & nutrition/Ghana] ** Missing in action: Frank Otchere [Resilience/poverty]
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