Pathways Out of Extreme Poverty

This paper analyzes a four-arm randomized evaluation of a multi-faceted economic inclusion intervention delivered by the Government of Niger to female beneficiaries of a national cash transfer program. All three treatment arms include a core package of group savings promotion, coaching, and entrepreneurship training, in addition to the regular cash transfers from the national program. The first variant also includes a lump-sum cash grant and is similar to a traditional graduation intervention (“capital” package). The second variant substitutes the cash grant with psychosocial interventions (“psychosocial” package). The third variant includes the cash grant and the psychosocial interventions (“full” package). The control group only receives the regular cash transfers from the national program. All three treatments generate large impacts on consumption and food security six and 18 months post-intervention. They increase participation and profits in women-led off-farm business and livestock activities, as well as improve various dimensions of psychosocial well-being. The impacts tend to be larger in the full treatment, followed by the capital and psychosocial treatments. Consumption impacts up to 18 months after the intervention already exceed costs in the psychosocial package (the benefit-cost ratio for the psychosocial package is 126 percent; full package, 95 percent; and capital package, 58 percent). These results highlight the value of addressing psychosocial constraints as well as capital constraints in government-implemented poverty reduction programs.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bossuroy, Thomas, Goldstein, Markus, Karlan, Dean, Kazianga, Harounan, Pariente, William, Premand, Patrick, Thomas, Catherine, Udry, Christopher, Vaillant, Julia, Wright, Kelsey
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021-03
Subjects:POVERTY, LIVELIHOODS, GRADUATION, ECONOMIC INCLUSION, PSYCHOSOCIAL, CASH GRANT, FIELD EXPERIMENT, AFRICA GENDER POLICY, GENDER INNOVATION LAB, WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT, WOMEN AND SOCIAL PROTECTION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/404231614713033789/Pathways-out-of-Extreme-Poverty-Tackling-Psychosocial-and-Capital-Constraints-with-a-Multi-faceted-Social-Protection-Program-in-Niger
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/35211
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098635211
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986352112024-08-30T06:23:56Z Pathways Out of Extreme Poverty Tackling Psychosocial and Capital Constraints with a Multi-faceted Social Protection Program in Niger Bossuroy, Thomas Goldstein, Markus Karlan, Dean Kazianga, Harounan Pariente, William Premand, Patrick Thomas, Catherine Udry, Christopher Vaillant, Julia Wright, Kelsey POVERTY LIVELIHOODS GRADUATION ECONOMIC INCLUSION PSYCHOSOCIAL CASH GRANT FIELD EXPERIMENT AFRICA GENDER POLICY GENDER INNOVATION LAB WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT WOMEN AND SOCIAL PROTECTION This paper analyzes a four-arm randomized evaluation of a multi-faceted economic inclusion intervention delivered by the Government of Niger to female beneficiaries of a national cash transfer program. All three treatment arms include a core package of group savings promotion, coaching, and entrepreneurship training, in addition to the regular cash transfers from the national program. The first variant also includes a lump-sum cash grant and is similar to a traditional graduation intervention (“capital” package). The second variant substitutes the cash grant with psychosocial interventions (“psychosocial” package). The third variant includes the cash grant and the psychosocial interventions (“full” package). The control group only receives the regular cash transfers from the national program. All three treatments generate large impacts on consumption and food security six and 18 months post-intervention. They increase participation and profits in women-led off-farm business and livestock activities, as well as improve various dimensions of psychosocial well-being. The impacts tend to be larger in the full treatment, followed by the capital and psychosocial treatments. Consumption impacts up to 18 months after the intervention already exceed costs in the psychosocial package (the benefit-cost ratio for the psychosocial package is 126 percent; full package, 95 percent; and capital package, 58 percent). These results highlight the value of addressing psychosocial constraints as well as capital constraints in government-implemented poverty reduction programs. 2021-03-04T14:44:24Z 2021-03-04T14:44:24Z 2021-03 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/404231614713033789/Pathways-out-of-Extreme-Poverty-Tackling-Psychosocial-and-Capital-Constraints-with-a-Multi-faceted-Social-Protection-Program-in-Niger https://hdl.handle.net/10986/35211 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9562 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 POVERTY
LIVELIHOODS
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
CASH GRANT
FIELD EXPERIMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
WOMEN AND SOCIAL PROTECTION
POVERTY
LIVELIHOODS
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
CASH GRANT
FIELD EXPERIMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
WOMEN AND SOCIAL PROTECTION
spellingShingle POVERTY
LIVELIHOODS
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
CASH GRANT
FIELD EXPERIMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
WOMEN AND SOCIAL PROTECTION
POVERTY
LIVELIHOODS
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
CASH GRANT
FIELD EXPERIMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
WOMEN AND SOCIAL PROTECTION
Bossuroy, Thomas
Goldstein, Markus
Karlan, Dean
Kazianga, Harounan
Pariente, William
Premand, Patrick
Thomas, Catherine
Udry, Christopher
Vaillant, Julia
Wright, Kelsey
Pathways Out of Extreme Poverty
description This paper analyzes a four-arm randomized evaluation of a multi-faceted economic inclusion intervention delivered by the Government of Niger to female beneficiaries of a national cash transfer program. All three treatment arms include a core package of group savings promotion, coaching, and entrepreneurship training, in addition to the regular cash transfers from the national program. The first variant also includes a lump-sum cash grant and is similar to a traditional graduation intervention (“capital” package). The second variant substitutes the cash grant with psychosocial interventions (“psychosocial” package). The third variant includes the cash grant and the psychosocial interventions (“full” package). The control group only receives the regular cash transfers from the national program. All three treatments generate large impacts on consumption and food security six and 18 months post-intervention. They increase participation and profits in women-led off-farm business and livestock activities, as well as improve various dimensions of psychosocial well-being. The impacts tend to be larger in the full treatment, followed by the capital and psychosocial treatments. Consumption impacts up to 18 months after the intervention already exceed costs in the psychosocial package (the benefit-cost ratio for the psychosocial package is 126 percent; full package, 95 percent; and capital package, 58 percent). These results highlight the value of addressing psychosocial constraints as well as capital constraints in government-implemented poverty reduction programs.
format Working Paper
topic_facet POVERTY
LIVELIHOODS
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
CASH GRANT
FIELD EXPERIMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
WOMEN AND SOCIAL PROTECTION
author Bossuroy, Thomas
Goldstein, Markus
Karlan, Dean
Kazianga, Harounan
Pariente, William
Premand, Patrick
Thomas, Catherine
Udry, Christopher
Vaillant, Julia
Wright, Kelsey
author_facet Bossuroy, Thomas
Goldstein, Markus
Karlan, Dean
Kazianga, Harounan
Pariente, William
Premand, Patrick
Thomas, Catherine
Udry, Christopher
Vaillant, Julia
Wright, Kelsey
author_sort Bossuroy, Thomas
title Pathways Out of Extreme Poverty
title_short Pathways Out of Extreme Poverty
title_full Pathways Out of Extreme Poverty
title_fullStr Pathways Out of Extreme Poverty
title_full_unstemmed Pathways Out of Extreme Poverty
title_sort pathways out of extreme poverty
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021-03
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/404231614713033789/Pathways-out-of-Extreme-Poverty-Tackling-Psychosocial-and-Capital-Constraints-with-a-Multi-faceted-Social-Protection-Program-in-Niger
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/35211
work_keys_str_mv AT bossuroythomas pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT goldsteinmarkus pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT karlandean pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT kaziangaharounan pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT parientewilliam pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT premandpatrick pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT thomascatherine pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT udrychristopher pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT vaillantjulia pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT wrightkelsey pathwaysoutofextremepoverty
AT bossuroythomas tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
AT goldsteinmarkus tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
AT karlandean tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
AT kaziangaharounan tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
AT parientewilliam tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
AT premandpatrick tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
AT thomascatherine tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
AT udrychristopher tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
AT vaillantjulia tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
AT wrightkelsey tacklingpsychosocialandcapitalconstraintswithamultifacetedsocialprotectionprograminniger
_version_ 1809105384450818048