Designing Cost-Effective Cash Transfer Programs to Boost Schooling among Young Women in Sub-Saharan Africa
Keywords
TEACHERCLASSROOMS
RURAL EDUCATION
PAPERS
LABOR MARKET
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
READING
ALCOHOLIC
SECONDARY SCHOOL
LITERACY
TEENAGE PREGNANCY
MARITAL STATUS
INTERVENTIONS
EARLY MARRIAGE
BENEFICIARIES
ENROLLMENT RATE
PRIMARY SCHOOL
TEXTBOOKS
SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
IMPACT EVALUATION
EDUCATION DECISIONS
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
SCHOOL SURVEY
EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
ENROLMENT RATES
CONTROL GROUPS
MOTHER
LOW ENROLMENT
FINAL OUTCOMES
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
SEXUALLY ACTIVE
AVERAGE SCHOOLING
URBAN AREAS
EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES
GIRLS IN SCHOOL
SEXUAL ACTIVITY
FERTILITY
HUSBANDS
WOMAN
SPILLOVER
PHYSICAL HEALTH
YOUNG WOMEN
LITERACY RATES
HIV
URBAN CENTER
PRIMARY LEVEL
POLICY RESEARCH
SECONDARY SCHOOLS
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SCHOOL DAYS
PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION
COGNITIVE OUTCOMES
SUBSISTENCE FARMING
HUMAN RESOURCES
RESPECT
LOWER LEVELS OF EDUCATION
ATTENDANCE RECORDS
DROPOUT RATE
QUANTITATIVE EVALUATION
TREATMENT EFFECTS
RURAL AREAS
INCOME
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
PROGRAMS
PROGRESS
HIV INFECTION
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
SCHOOL CHILDREN
NUMBER OF DROPOUTS
SCHOOLING
SCHOOL ENROLLMENT
NUMBER OF GIRLS
SCHOOLS
PROGRAM IMPACTS
RESEARCH REPORT
EXPENDITURES
INTERVENTION
CHURCHES
TREATMENT GROUPS
HOUSEHOLD ASSETS
GRADE LEVELS
NUMBER OF STUDENTS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
SCHOOL FEES
SCHOOL ENROLMENT
LOW ENROLMENT RATES
SAMPLE SIZE
LITERATURE
TEENAGE GIRLS
DROPOUT FROM SCHOOL
YOUNG PEOPLE
DROPOUT
GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT
CHILD HEALTH
CHILD LABOR
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
IHS
LEARNING
SOCIAL MARKETING
SCHOOL YEAR
SCHOOL DROPOUTS
SCHOOL GIRLS
LOW EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4282Abstract
As of 2007, 29 developing countries had some type of conditional cash transfer program in place, with many others planning or piloting one. However, the evidence base needed by a government to decide how to design a new conditional cash transfer program is severely limited in a number of critical dimensions. This paper presents one-year schooling impacts from a conditional cash transfer experiment among teenage girls and young women in Malawi, which was designed to address these shortcomings: conditionality status, size of separate transfers to the schoolgirl and the parent, and village-level saturation of treatment were all independently randomized. The authors find that the program had large impacts on school attendance: the re-enrollment rate among those who had already dropped out of school before the start of the program increased by two and a half times and the dropout rate among those in school at baseline decreased from 11 to 6 percent. These impacts were, on average, similar in the conditional and the unconditional treatment arms. Although most schooling outcomes examined here were unresponsive to variation in the size of the transfer to the parents, higher transfers given directly to the schoolgirls were associated with significantly improved school attendance and progress - but only if the transfers were conditional on school attendance. There were no spillover effects within treatment communities after the first year of program implementation. Policymakers looking to design cost-effective cash transfer programs targeted toward young women should note the relative insensitivity of these short-term program impacts with respect to conditionality and total transfer size.Date
2009-10-01Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/4282http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4282
Copyright/License
Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0Collections
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