The Regressive Demands of Demand-Driven Development

Despite their explicit focus on reaching the poor, many community driven development (CDD) initiatives are only partially successful in targeting spending towards them. This paper examines Tanzania's flagship CDD program and provides new evidence on the mechanisms by which the demand-driven components of the program may undermine the goal of pro-poor funding allocations. We exploit two data sources for the analysis: a census of wards for mainland Tanzania and a census of households in 100 program villages. These data paint a consistent picture at both levels: wealth, education, access to media, and political engagement are positively correlated with the likelihood to apply for the program at the national level, and to be aware of it at the local level. Centrally dictated features of the program – namely predetermined funding allocations to districts and eligibility rules – combine with the decentralized selection process within districts to counteract this initially regressive application pattern and produce a program that is, like many other CDD programs, only mildly pro-poor. Our results suggest that sensitization and outreach prior to the application process will be a critical dimension in making CDD programs more progressive.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Baird, Sarah, McIntosh, Craig, Özler, Berk
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Elsevier 2013-07-26
Subjects:targeting, community-driven development, poverty, elite capture, Microdata Set,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16222
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spelling dig-okr-10986162222021-04-23T14:03:28Z The Regressive Demands of Demand-Driven Development Baird, Sarah McIntosh, Craig Özler, Berk targeting community-driven development poverty elite capture Microdata Set Despite their explicit focus on reaching the poor, many community driven development (CDD) initiatives are only partially successful in targeting spending towards them. This paper examines Tanzania's flagship CDD program and provides new evidence on the mechanisms by which the demand-driven components of the program may undermine the goal of pro-poor funding allocations. We exploit two data sources for the analysis: a census of wards for mainland Tanzania and a census of households in 100 program villages. These data paint a consistent picture at both levels: wealth, education, access to media, and political engagement are positively correlated with the likelihood to apply for the program at the national level, and to be aware of it at the local level. Centrally dictated features of the program – namely predetermined funding allocations to districts and eligibility rules – combine with the decentralized selection process within districts to counteract this initially regressive application pattern and produce a program that is, like many other CDD programs, only mildly pro-poor. Our results suggest that sensitization and outreach prior to the application process will be a critical dimension in making CDD programs more progressive. 2013-11-05T23:12:37Z 2013-11-05T23:12:37Z 2013-07-26 Journal Article Journal of Public Economics 0047-2727 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16222 en_US CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ World Bank Elsevier Publications & Research :: Journal Article Publications & Research
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 en_US
topic targeting
community-driven development
poverty
elite capture
Microdata Set
targeting
community-driven development
poverty
elite capture
Microdata Set
spellingShingle targeting
community-driven development
poverty
elite capture
Microdata Set
targeting
community-driven development
poverty
elite capture
Microdata Set
Baird, Sarah
McIntosh, Craig
Özler, Berk
The Regressive Demands of Demand-Driven Development
description Despite their explicit focus on reaching the poor, many community driven development (CDD) initiatives are only partially successful in targeting spending towards them. This paper examines Tanzania's flagship CDD program and provides new evidence on the mechanisms by which the demand-driven components of the program may undermine the goal of pro-poor funding allocations. We exploit two data sources for the analysis: a census of wards for mainland Tanzania and a census of households in 100 program villages. These data paint a consistent picture at both levels: wealth, education, access to media, and political engagement are positively correlated with the likelihood to apply for the program at the national level, and to be aware of it at the local level. Centrally dictated features of the program – namely predetermined funding allocations to districts and eligibility rules – combine with the decentralized selection process within districts to counteract this initially regressive application pattern and produce a program that is, like many other CDD programs, only mildly pro-poor. Our results suggest that sensitization and outreach prior to the application process will be a critical dimension in making CDD programs more progressive.
format Journal Article
topic_facet targeting
community-driven development
poverty
elite capture
Microdata Set
author Baird, Sarah
McIntosh, Craig
Özler, Berk
author_facet Baird, Sarah
McIntosh, Craig
Özler, Berk
author_sort Baird, Sarah
title The Regressive Demands of Demand-Driven Development
title_short The Regressive Demands of Demand-Driven Development
title_full The Regressive Demands of Demand-Driven Development
title_fullStr The Regressive Demands of Demand-Driven Development
title_full_unstemmed The Regressive Demands of Demand-Driven Development
title_sort regressive demands of demand-driven development
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2013-07-26
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16222
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AT mcintoshcraig theregressivedemandsofdemanddrivendevelopment
AT ozlerberk theregressivedemandsofdemanddrivendevelopment
AT bairdsarah regressivedemandsofdemanddrivendevelopment
AT mcintoshcraig regressivedemandsofdemanddrivendevelopment
AT ozlerberk regressivedemandsofdemanddrivendevelopment
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