Mexico's PROGRESA : Innovative Targeting, Gender Focus and Impact on Social Welfare

PROGRESA (Programa de Educacion, Salud y Alimentacion) is an innovative Mexican program that provides cash transfers to poor rural households, on condition that their children attend school and their family visits local health centers regularly. Confronted with rising poverty after the economic crisis of 1995, the Mexican government progressively changed its poverty reduction strategy, ending universal tortilla subsidies and instead funding new investment in human capital through PROGRESA. The program gives cash grants to poor rural households, provided their children attend school for 85 percent of school days and the household, visit public health clinics and participate in educational workshops on health and nutrition. Founded in 1997, PROGRESA grew to cover around 2.6 million families by the end of 1999, the equivalent of 40 percent of all rural families, and one in nine families nationally. Operating in 31 of the 32 states, in 50,000 localities and 2,000 municipalities, its 1999 budget of US$777 million equaled 0.2 percent of Mexico's gross domestic product. The high level of funding for PROGRESA, and reduced funding for other programs, was based on a deliberate policy decision - to favor programs that are better targeted to the poor, which involve co-responsibility by beneficiaries, and which promote long-term behavioral change.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Siaens, Corinne, Wodon, Quentin, Yitzhaki, Shlomo, de la Briere, Benedicte
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2003-01
Subjects:ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS, ADULTHOOD, AGED, BABIES, BASIC EDUCATION, BIRTH SPACING, CASH TRANSFERS, CLINICS, COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION, ENROLLMENT, ENROLLMENT RATES, FAMILIES, GIRLS, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH SERVICES, HYGIENE, INCOME, INEQUALITY, INFANTS, MALNUTRITION, MOTHERS, NUTRITION, NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS, PARENTS, POOR, POVERTY REDUCTION, PREGNANCY, PREGNANT WOMEN, PRENATAL CARE, PRIMARY SCHOOL, PUBLIC HEALTH, REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, RURAL AREAS, SCHOOLS, SOCIAL PROGRAMS, TARGETING, TRANSFER AMOUNTS, WASTE, YOUNG PEOPLE CASH TRANSFERS, SOCIAL WELFARE, GENDER ISSUES, RURAL HOUSEHOLDS, HEALTH ISSUES, POVERTY, POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES, HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENTS, GRANTS IN AID, EDUCATION PROGRAMS, HEALTH & NUTRITION PROGRAMS, POOR FAMILIES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/01/2519958/mexicos-progresa-innovative-targeting-gender-focus-impact-social-welfare
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/10396
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098610396
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986103962024-08-08T17:42:53Z Mexico's PROGRESA : Innovative Targeting, Gender Focus and Impact on Social Welfare PROGRESA de Mexico : focalizacion innovadora, centrado en el genero y sus efectos en el bienestar social Siaens, Corinne Wodon, Quentin Yitzhaki, Shlomo de la Briere, Benedicte ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS ADULTHOOD AGED BABIES BASIC EDUCATION BIRTH SPACING CASH TRANSFERS CLINICS COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION ENROLLMENT ENROLLMENT RATES FAMILIES GIRLS HEALTH CARE HEALTH SERVICES HYGIENE INCOME INEQUALITY INFANTS MALNUTRITION MOTHERS NUTRITION NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS PARENTS POOR POVERTY REDUCTION PREGNANCY PREGNANT WOMEN PRENATAL CARE PRIMARY SCHOOL PUBLIC HEALTH REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RURAL AREAS SCHOOLS SOCIAL PROGRAMS TARGETING TRANSFER AMOUNTS WASTE YOUNG PEOPLE CASH TRANSFERS SOCIAL WELFARE GENDER ISSUES RURAL HOUSEHOLDS HEALTH ISSUES POVERTY POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENTS GRANTS IN AID EDUCATION PROGRAMS HEALTH & NUTRITION PROGRAMS POOR FAMILIES COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION PROGRESA (Programa de Educacion, Salud y Alimentacion) is an innovative Mexican program that provides cash transfers to poor rural households, on condition that their children attend school and their family visits local health centers regularly. Confronted with rising poverty after the economic crisis of 1995, the Mexican government progressively changed its poverty reduction strategy, ending universal tortilla subsidies and instead funding new investment in human capital through PROGRESA. The program gives cash grants to poor rural households, provided their children attend school for 85 percent of school days and the household, visit public health clinics and participate in educational workshops on health and nutrition. Founded in 1997, PROGRESA grew to cover around 2.6 million families by the end of 1999, the equivalent of 40 percent of all rural families, and one in nine families nationally. Operating in 31 of the 32 states, in 50,000 localities and 2,000 municipalities, its 1999 budget of US$777 million equaled 0.2 percent of Mexico's gross domestic product. The high level of funding for PROGRESA, and reduced funding for other programs, was based on a deliberate policy decision - to favor programs that are better targeted to the poor, which involve co-responsibility by beneficiaries, and which promote long-term behavioral change. 2012-08-13T11:20:55Z 2012-08-13T11:20:55Z 2003-01 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/01/2519958/mexicos-progresa-innovative-targeting-gender-focus-impact-social-welfare https://hdl.handle.net/10986/10396 English en breve; No. 17 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS
ADULTHOOD
AGED
BABIES
BASIC EDUCATION
BIRTH SPACING
CASH TRANSFERS
CLINICS
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
ENROLLMENT
ENROLLMENT RATES
FAMILIES
GIRLS
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH SERVICES
HYGIENE
INCOME
INEQUALITY
INFANTS
MALNUTRITION
MOTHERS
NUTRITION
NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS
PARENTS
POOR
POVERTY REDUCTION
PREGNANCY
PREGNANT WOMEN
PRENATAL CARE
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PUBLIC HEALTH
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
RURAL AREAS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
TARGETING
TRANSFER AMOUNTS
WASTE
YOUNG PEOPLE CASH TRANSFERS
SOCIAL WELFARE
GENDER ISSUES
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
HEALTH ISSUES
POVERTY
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
GRANTS IN AID
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
HEALTH & NUTRITION PROGRAMS
POOR FAMILIES
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS
ADULTHOOD
AGED
BABIES
BASIC EDUCATION
BIRTH SPACING
CASH TRANSFERS
CLINICS
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
ENROLLMENT
ENROLLMENT RATES
FAMILIES
GIRLS
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH SERVICES
HYGIENE
INCOME
INEQUALITY
INFANTS
MALNUTRITION
MOTHERS
NUTRITION
NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS
PARENTS
POOR
POVERTY REDUCTION
PREGNANCY
PREGNANT WOMEN
PRENATAL CARE
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PUBLIC HEALTH
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
RURAL AREAS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
TARGETING
TRANSFER AMOUNTS
WASTE
YOUNG PEOPLE CASH TRANSFERS
SOCIAL WELFARE
GENDER ISSUES
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
HEALTH ISSUES
POVERTY
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
GRANTS IN AID
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
HEALTH & NUTRITION PROGRAMS
POOR FAMILIES
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
spellingShingle ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS
ADULTHOOD
AGED
BABIES
BASIC EDUCATION
BIRTH SPACING
CASH TRANSFERS
CLINICS
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
ENROLLMENT
ENROLLMENT RATES
FAMILIES
GIRLS
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH SERVICES
HYGIENE
INCOME
INEQUALITY
INFANTS
MALNUTRITION
MOTHERS
NUTRITION
NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS
PARENTS
POOR
POVERTY REDUCTION
PREGNANCY
PREGNANT WOMEN
PRENATAL CARE
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PUBLIC HEALTH
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
RURAL AREAS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
TARGETING
TRANSFER AMOUNTS
WASTE
YOUNG PEOPLE CASH TRANSFERS
SOCIAL WELFARE
GENDER ISSUES
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
HEALTH ISSUES
POVERTY
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
GRANTS IN AID
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
HEALTH & NUTRITION PROGRAMS
POOR FAMILIES
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS
ADULTHOOD
AGED
BABIES
BASIC EDUCATION
BIRTH SPACING
CASH TRANSFERS
CLINICS
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
ENROLLMENT
ENROLLMENT RATES
FAMILIES
GIRLS
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH SERVICES
HYGIENE
INCOME
INEQUALITY
INFANTS
MALNUTRITION
MOTHERS
NUTRITION
NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS
PARENTS
POOR
POVERTY REDUCTION
PREGNANCY
PREGNANT WOMEN
PRENATAL CARE
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PUBLIC HEALTH
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
RURAL AREAS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
TARGETING
TRANSFER AMOUNTS
WASTE
YOUNG PEOPLE CASH TRANSFERS
SOCIAL WELFARE
GENDER ISSUES
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
HEALTH ISSUES
POVERTY
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
GRANTS IN AID
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
HEALTH & NUTRITION PROGRAMS
POOR FAMILIES
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
Siaens, Corinne
Wodon, Quentin
Yitzhaki, Shlomo
de la Briere, Benedicte
Mexico's PROGRESA : Innovative Targeting, Gender Focus and Impact on Social Welfare
description PROGRESA (Programa de Educacion, Salud y Alimentacion) is an innovative Mexican program that provides cash transfers to poor rural households, on condition that their children attend school and their family visits local health centers regularly. Confronted with rising poverty after the economic crisis of 1995, the Mexican government progressively changed its poverty reduction strategy, ending universal tortilla subsidies and instead funding new investment in human capital through PROGRESA. The program gives cash grants to poor rural households, provided their children attend school for 85 percent of school days and the household, visit public health clinics and participate in educational workshops on health and nutrition. Founded in 1997, PROGRESA grew to cover around 2.6 million families by the end of 1999, the equivalent of 40 percent of all rural families, and one in nine families nationally. Operating in 31 of the 32 states, in 50,000 localities and 2,000 municipalities, its 1999 budget of US$777 million equaled 0.2 percent of Mexico's gross domestic product. The high level of funding for PROGRESA, and reduced funding for other programs, was based on a deliberate policy decision - to favor programs that are better targeted to the poor, which involve co-responsibility by beneficiaries, and which promote long-term behavioral change.
topic_facet ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS
ADULTHOOD
AGED
BABIES
BASIC EDUCATION
BIRTH SPACING
CASH TRANSFERS
CLINICS
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
ENROLLMENT
ENROLLMENT RATES
FAMILIES
GIRLS
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH SERVICES
HYGIENE
INCOME
INEQUALITY
INFANTS
MALNUTRITION
MOTHERS
NUTRITION
NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS
PARENTS
POOR
POVERTY REDUCTION
PREGNANCY
PREGNANT WOMEN
PRENATAL CARE
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PUBLIC HEALTH
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
RURAL AREAS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
TARGETING
TRANSFER AMOUNTS
WASTE
YOUNG PEOPLE CASH TRANSFERS
SOCIAL WELFARE
GENDER ISSUES
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
HEALTH ISSUES
POVERTY
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
GRANTS IN AID
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
HEALTH & NUTRITION PROGRAMS
POOR FAMILIES
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
author Siaens, Corinne
Wodon, Quentin
Yitzhaki, Shlomo
de la Briere, Benedicte
author_facet Siaens, Corinne
Wodon, Quentin
Yitzhaki, Shlomo
de la Briere, Benedicte
author_sort Siaens, Corinne
title Mexico's PROGRESA : Innovative Targeting, Gender Focus and Impact on Social Welfare
title_short Mexico's PROGRESA : Innovative Targeting, Gender Focus and Impact on Social Welfare
title_full Mexico's PROGRESA : Innovative Targeting, Gender Focus and Impact on Social Welfare
title_fullStr Mexico's PROGRESA : Innovative Targeting, Gender Focus and Impact on Social Welfare
title_full_unstemmed Mexico's PROGRESA : Innovative Targeting, Gender Focus and Impact on Social Welfare
title_sort mexico's progresa : innovative targeting, gender focus and impact on social welfare
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2003-01
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/01/2519958/mexicos-progresa-innovative-targeting-gender-focus-impact-social-welfare
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/10396
work_keys_str_mv AT siaenscorinne mexicosprogresainnovativetargetinggenderfocusandimpactonsocialwelfare
AT wodonquentin mexicosprogresainnovativetargetinggenderfocusandimpactonsocialwelfare
AT yitzhakishlomo mexicosprogresainnovativetargetinggenderfocusandimpactonsocialwelfare
AT delabrierebenedicte mexicosprogresainnovativetargetinggenderfocusandimpactonsocialwelfare
AT siaenscorinne progresademexicofocalizacioninnovadoracentradoenelgeneroysusefectosenelbienestarsocial
AT wodonquentin progresademexicofocalizacioninnovadoracentradoenelgeneroysusefectosenelbienestarsocial
AT yitzhakishlomo progresademexicofocalizacioninnovadoracentradoenelgeneroysusefectosenelbienestarsocial
AT delabrierebenedicte progresademexicofocalizacioninnovadoracentradoenelgeneroysusefectosenelbienestarsocial
_version_ 1807154894694514688