Cash, Conditions, and Child Development: Experimental Evidence from a Cash Transfer Program in Honduras

被引:5
|
作者
Boo, Florencia Lopez [1 ]
Creamer, John [2 ]
机构
[1] Interamer Dev Bank, Washington, DC 20577 USA
[2] US Census Bur, Suitland, MD USA
关键词
Honduras; education; health; early childhood development; children; conditional cash transfers; impact evaluation; MATTER;
D O I
10.1353/eco.2019.0005
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
We explore the effects of a randomly assigned conditional cash transfer in Honduras (Bono 10,000) on early childhood development. We find significant impacts on cognitive development in children aged zero to sixty months, with an average effect of 0.13 standard deviations. We show differential impacts by type of transfer: zero-to five-year-old children from families receiving the health transfer, which targeted families with zero-to five-year-old children only, benefited significantly from the program, whereas zero-to five-year-olds in families receiving the education transfer, which targeted six-to eighteen-year-olds, perceived no benefit. In comparison with other programs, the effect of this impact is sizable (0.34 standard deviations, on average). Although the overall program appears to have slightly changed some behaviors that might affect children (namely, decreased probability of maternal employment and increased maternal self-esteem), we did not find heterogeneous impacts of the Bono across these variables. Results are explained mainly by differences in conditions: while the education component imposed conditions only on children of school age, the health transfer required regular health checkups of zero-to five-year-old children. The health transfer families were more likely to attend health checkups, which may have induced behavioral changes that improved children's health and cognitive development, including purchasing more nutritious food. These results imply that cash without well-targeted conditions might not be as effective for the development of young children.
引用
收藏
页码:169 / 196
页数:28
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Short-term impacts of an unconditional cash transfer program on child schooling: Experimental evidence from Malawi
    Kilburn, Kelly
    Handa, Sudhanshu
    Angeles, Gustavo
    Mvula, Peter
    Tsoka, Maxton
    [J]. ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION REVIEW, 2017, 59 : 63 - 80
  • [2] Cash or Condition? Evidence from a Cash Transfer Experiment
    Baird, Sarah
    McIntosh, Craig
    Oezler, Berk
    [J]. QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 2011, 126 (04): : 1709 - 1753
  • [3] Cash transfer and multidimensional child poverty: evidence from Ghana
    Osei, Kwabena Brefo
    Turkson, Danny
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ECONOMICS, 2022, 49 (05) : 744 - 764
  • [4] Cash transfer program and child underweight-Empirical evidence from a causal mediation analysis
    Liao, Pei-An
    Chang, Hung-Hao
    Su, Yi-Ju
    [J]. AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 2020, 51 (02) : 291 - 303
  • [5] Do cash transfers increase nutritional intakes? Experimental evidence from an unconditional cash transfer in Kenya
    Aizawa, Toshiaki
    [J]. HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2020, 35 (07) : 784 - 798
  • [6] INCENTIVE VALUE OF CASH IN A CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFER PROGRAM FOR MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH AND NUTRITION IN MALI
    Le Port, Agnes
    Zongrone, Amanda
    Savy, Mathilde
    Fortin, Sonia
    Kameli, Yves
    Diatta, Ampa D.
    Sessou, Eric
    Kodjo, Niamke Ezoua
    Martin-Prevel, Yves
    Ruel, Marie
    [J]. ANNALS OF NUTRITION AND METABOLISM, 2017, 71 : 770 - 771
  • [7] Liquidity constraints, spillovers, and entrepreneurship: evidence from a cash transfer program
    Ribas, Rafael P.
    [J]. SMALL BUSINESS ECONOMICS, 2020, 55 (04) : 1131 - 1158
  • [8] Liquidity constraints, spillovers, and entrepreneurship: evidence from a cash transfer program
    Rafael P. Ribas
    [J]. Small Business Economics, 2020, 55 : 1131 - 1158
  • [9] The impact of a conditional cash transfer program on food consumption: The Honduras family allowance program (PRAF)
    Wiesmann, Doris
    Hoddinott, John
    [J]. FASEB JOURNAL, 2007, 21 (05): : A54 - A54
  • [10] Less Cash, Less Crime: Evidence from the Electronic Benefit Transfer Program
    Wright, Richard
    Tekin, Erdal
    Topalli, Volkan
    McClellan, Chandler
    Dickinson, Timothy
    Rosenfeld, Richard
    [J]. JOURNAL OF LAW & ECONOMICS, 2017, 60 (02): : 361 - 383