If You Give People Cash, Does It Help?

In Uganda, researchers evaluated a government program that gave unsupervised cash grants to youth for small business development and training. Based on final results four years after the intervention, the cash transfers achieved nearly all the goals. Beneficiaries invested most of the cash in building business opportunities. While they still did agricultural work, they spent more time working in skilled industry and services and their incomes rose. The study also illustrates the important weaknesses of microfinance. This impact evaluation and a host of other studies show that many young adults have high returns on investment when they have access to capital. Microloans are poor vehicles for small business growth and the development of cottage industry. As governments and the private sector work to develop this financial sophistication, cash transfers are likely to be important drivers of poverty alleviation and development for youth. This Evidence to Policy note was jointly produced by the World Bank Group, the Strategic Impact Evaluation Fund (SIEF), and the British governments Department for International Development.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013-11
Subjects:ACCESS TO CAPITAL, ACCESS TO CREDIT, ACCESSIBLE FINANCE, ARMED CONFLICTS, BANK ACCOUNT, BENEFICIARIES, BUDGETING, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES, CASH TRANSFER, CASH TRANSFERS, CREDIT ACCESS, CREDIT CONSTRAINTS, CREDIT MARKETS, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DRIVERS, EARNINGS, ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, EMERGING ECONOMIES, EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES, ENTREPRENEURS, FAMILIES, FAMILY SUPPORT, FIRMS, GENDER, HIGH INTEREST RATES, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, INCOME, INCOME-GENERATING PROJECTS, INNOVATIONS, INTEREST RATE, INTEREST RATES, INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES, JOB OPPORTUNITIES, LEARNING, LOCAL ECONOMY, MICROFINANCE, MICROFINANCE TOOLS, MONEYLENDERS, POLITICAL PARTICIPATION, PRIMARY SCHOOL, REAL INTEREST, REAL INTEREST RATES, RETURNS, SKILLS TRAINING, SMALL BUSINESS, SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT, SMALL BUSINESS GROWTH, SMALL BUSINESSES, START-UP, START-UP CAPITAL, TRAINING PROGRAMS, UNEMPLOYED, UNEMPLOYMENT, UNSKILLED JOBS, VOCATIONAL TRAINING, VOUCHER, VOUCHERS, YOUTH, YOUTH EMPLOYMENT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/11/18563428/uganda-give-people-cash-help
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22607
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098622607
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986226072021-04-23T14:04:09Z If You Give People Cash, Does It Help? World Bank ACCESS TO CAPITAL ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESSIBLE FINANCE ARMED CONFLICTS BANK ACCOUNT BENEFICIARIES BUDGETING BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES CASH TRANSFER CASH TRANSFERS CREDIT ACCESS CREDIT CONSTRAINTS CREDIT MARKETS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DRIVERS EARNINGS ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES EMERGING ECONOMIES EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES ENTREPRENEURS FAMILIES FAMILY SUPPORT FIRMS GENDER HIGH INTEREST RATES HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INCOME INCOME-GENERATING PROJECTS INNOVATIONS INTEREST RATE INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES JOB OPPORTUNITIES LEARNING LOCAL ECONOMY MICROFINANCE MICROFINANCE TOOLS MONEYLENDERS POLITICAL PARTICIPATION PRIMARY SCHOOL REAL INTEREST REAL INTEREST RATES RETURNS SKILLS TRAINING SMALL BUSINESS SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT SMALL BUSINESS GROWTH SMALL BUSINESSES START-UP START-UP CAPITAL TRAINING PROGRAMS UNEMPLOYED UNEMPLOYMENT UNSKILLED JOBS VOCATIONAL TRAINING VOUCHER VOUCHERS YOUTH YOUTH EMPLOYMENT In Uganda, researchers evaluated a government program that gave unsupervised cash grants to youth for small business development and training. Based on final results four years after the intervention, the cash transfers achieved nearly all the goals. Beneficiaries invested most of the cash in building business opportunities. While they still did agricultural work, they spent more time working in skilled industry and services and their incomes rose. The study also illustrates the important weaknesses of microfinance. This impact evaluation and a host of other studies show that many young adults have high returns on investment when they have access to capital. Microloans are poor vehicles for small business growth and the development of cottage industry. As governments and the private sector work to develop this financial sophistication, cash transfers are likely to be important drivers of poverty alleviation and development for youth. This Evidence to Policy note was jointly produced by the World Bank Group, the Strategic Impact Evaluation Fund (SIEF), and the British governments Department for International Development. 2015-09-14T15:25:54Z 2015-09-14T15:25:54Z 2013-11 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/11/18563428/uganda-give-people-cash-help http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22607 English en_US From evidence to policy; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Brief Africa Uganda
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
en_US
topic ACCESS TO CAPITAL
ACCESS TO CREDIT
ACCESSIBLE FINANCE
ARMED CONFLICTS
BANK ACCOUNT
BENEFICIARIES
BUDGETING
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CASH TRANSFER
CASH TRANSFERS
CREDIT ACCESS
CREDIT CONSTRAINTS
CREDIT MARKETS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DRIVERS
EARNINGS
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
ENTREPRENEURS
FAMILIES
FAMILY SUPPORT
FIRMS
GENDER
HIGH INTEREST RATES
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
INCOME
INCOME-GENERATING PROJECTS
INNOVATIONS
INTEREST RATE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
LEARNING
LOCAL ECONOMY
MICROFINANCE
MICROFINANCE TOOLS
MONEYLENDERS
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
REAL INTEREST
REAL INTEREST RATES
RETURNS
SKILLS TRAINING
SMALL BUSINESS
SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
SMALL BUSINESS GROWTH
SMALL BUSINESSES
START-UP
START-UP CAPITAL
TRAINING PROGRAMS
UNEMPLOYED
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNSKILLED JOBS
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
VOUCHER
VOUCHERS
YOUTH
YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
ACCESS TO CAPITAL
ACCESS TO CREDIT
ACCESSIBLE FINANCE
ARMED CONFLICTS
BANK ACCOUNT
BENEFICIARIES
BUDGETING
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CASH TRANSFER
CASH TRANSFERS
CREDIT ACCESS
CREDIT CONSTRAINTS
CREDIT MARKETS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DRIVERS
EARNINGS
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
ENTREPRENEURS
FAMILIES
FAMILY SUPPORT
FIRMS
GENDER
HIGH INTEREST RATES
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
INCOME
INCOME-GENERATING PROJECTS
INNOVATIONS
INTEREST RATE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
LEARNING
LOCAL ECONOMY
MICROFINANCE
MICROFINANCE TOOLS
MONEYLENDERS
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
REAL INTEREST
REAL INTEREST RATES
RETURNS
SKILLS TRAINING
SMALL BUSINESS
SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
SMALL BUSINESS GROWTH
SMALL BUSINESSES
START-UP
START-UP CAPITAL
TRAINING PROGRAMS
UNEMPLOYED
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNSKILLED JOBS
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
VOUCHER
VOUCHERS
YOUTH
YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
spellingShingle ACCESS TO CAPITAL
ACCESS TO CREDIT
ACCESSIBLE FINANCE
ARMED CONFLICTS
BANK ACCOUNT
BENEFICIARIES
BUDGETING
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CASH TRANSFER
CASH TRANSFERS
CREDIT ACCESS
CREDIT CONSTRAINTS
CREDIT MARKETS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DRIVERS
EARNINGS
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
ENTREPRENEURS
FAMILIES
FAMILY SUPPORT
FIRMS
GENDER
HIGH INTEREST RATES
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
INCOME
INCOME-GENERATING PROJECTS
INNOVATIONS
INTEREST RATE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
LEARNING
LOCAL ECONOMY
MICROFINANCE
MICROFINANCE TOOLS
MONEYLENDERS
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
REAL INTEREST
REAL INTEREST RATES
RETURNS
SKILLS TRAINING
SMALL BUSINESS
SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
SMALL BUSINESS GROWTH
SMALL BUSINESSES
START-UP
START-UP CAPITAL
TRAINING PROGRAMS
UNEMPLOYED
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNSKILLED JOBS
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
VOUCHER
VOUCHERS
YOUTH
YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
ACCESS TO CAPITAL
ACCESS TO CREDIT
ACCESSIBLE FINANCE
ARMED CONFLICTS
BANK ACCOUNT
BENEFICIARIES
BUDGETING
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CASH TRANSFER
CASH TRANSFERS
CREDIT ACCESS
CREDIT CONSTRAINTS
CREDIT MARKETS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DRIVERS
EARNINGS
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
ENTREPRENEURS
FAMILIES
FAMILY SUPPORT
FIRMS
GENDER
HIGH INTEREST RATES
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
INCOME
INCOME-GENERATING PROJECTS
INNOVATIONS
INTEREST RATE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
LEARNING
LOCAL ECONOMY
MICROFINANCE
MICROFINANCE TOOLS
MONEYLENDERS
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
REAL INTEREST
REAL INTEREST RATES
RETURNS
SKILLS TRAINING
SMALL BUSINESS
SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
SMALL BUSINESS GROWTH
SMALL BUSINESSES
START-UP
START-UP CAPITAL
TRAINING PROGRAMS
UNEMPLOYED
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNSKILLED JOBS
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
VOUCHER
VOUCHERS
YOUTH
YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
World Bank
If You Give People Cash, Does It Help?
description In Uganda, researchers evaluated a government program that gave unsupervised cash grants to youth for small business development and training. Based on final results four years after the intervention, the cash transfers achieved nearly all the goals. Beneficiaries invested most of the cash in building business opportunities. While they still did agricultural work, they spent more time working in skilled industry and services and their incomes rose. The study also illustrates the important weaknesses of microfinance. This impact evaluation and a host of other studies show that many young adults have high returns on investment when they have access to capital. Microloans are poor vehicles for small business growth and the development of cottage industry. As governments and the private sector work to develop this financial sophistication, cash transfers are likely to be important drivers of poverty alleviation and development for youth. This Evidence to Policy note was jointly produced by the World Bank Group, the Strategic Impact Evaluation Fund (SIEF), and the British governments Department for International Development.
format Brief
topic_facet ACCESS TO CAPITAL
ACCESS TO CREDIT
ACCESSIBLE FINANCE
ARMED CONFLICTS
BANK ACCOUNT
BENEFICIARIES
BUDGETING
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CASH TRANSFER
CASH TRANSFERS
CREDIT ACCESS
CREDIT CONSTRAINTS
CREDIT MARKETS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DRIVERS
EARNINGS
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
ENTREPRENEURS
FAMILIES
FAMILY SUPPORT
FIRMS
GENDER
HIGH INTEREST RATES
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
INCOME
INCOME-GENERATING PROJECTS
INNOVATIONS
INTEREST RATE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
LEARNING
LOCAL ECONOMY
MICROFINANCE
MICROFINANCE TOOLS
MONEYLENDERS
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
REAL INTEREST
REAL INTEREST RATES
RETURNS
SKILLS TRAINING
SMALL BUSINESS
SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
SMALL BUSINESS GROWTH
SMALL BUSINESSES
START-UP
START-UP CAPITAL
TRAINING PROGRAMS
UNEMPLOYED
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNSKILLED JOBS
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
VOUCHER
VOUCHERS
YOUTH
YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title If You Give People Cash, Does It Help?
title_short If You Give People Cash, Does It Help?
title_full If You Give People Cash, Does It Help?
title_fullStr If You Give People Cash, Does It Help?
title_full_unstemmed If You Give People Cash, Does It Help?
title_sort if you give people cash, does it help?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2013-11
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/11/18563428/uganda-give-people-cash-help
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22607
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbank ifyougivepeoplecashdoesithelp
_version_ 1756574100510212096