How Culturally Wise Psychological Interventions Help Reduce Poverty

Poverty is multidimensional, associated not only with a lack of financial resources, but also often social-psychological constraints, such as diminished agency and aspirations. Through a series of field experiments, this paper assesses the causal impacts of culturally wise interventions designed to build women’s agency on poverty reduction efforts in rural Niger. Moreover, the study identifies a model of agency that is “culturally wise” because it is the most motivational and functional in the study cultural context. Study 1 reports descriptive evidence that an interdependent model of agency—that is grounded in social harmony, respect, and collective advancement and that accounts for relational affordances for individual goals—is predominant in rural Niger. This stands in contrast to a more self-oriented, independent model grounded in personal aspirations, self-direction, and self-advancement that is more common in the West. Study 2 explores the psychosocial mechanisms of a highly effective, multifaceted poverty reduction program that included two psychosocial interventions—a community sensitization and a life skills training, which incorporated both models of agency. Although the results support the role of intrapersonal processes (including enhanced self-efficacy and optimistic future expectations) in driving economic impacts, there is equal, if not greater, support for relational processes (including increased subjective social standing, control over earnings, and social support). Study 3 conducts a mechanism experiment to disentangle the causal effects of interventions grounded in independent agency (“personal initiative”) or interdependent agency (“interpersonal initiative”). The results show that the interdependent agency intervention, which is considered to be most “culturally wise,” led to significant effects on economic outcomes as well as both intrapersonal and relational processes. By contrast, the independent agency intervention showed impacts on intrapersonal processes alone. These findings show the promise of an emerging area of research at the intersection of behavioral science, cultural psychology, and development economics for addressing complex global problems like poverty and inequality.

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Main Authors: Thomas, Catherine, Premand, Patrick, Bossuroy, Thomas, Abdoulaye Sambo, Soumaila, Markus, Hazel, Walton, Gregory
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2024-06-28
Subjects:POVERTY, BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE, PSYCHOLOGY, CULTURE, AGENCY, GRADUATION, ECONOMIC INCLUSION, PSYCHOSOCIAL, NO POVERTY, SDG 1, GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING, SDG 3, DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH, SDG 8,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099025506262410295/IDU18c0fc4c619919149d8196051fa2f59845124
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41797
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spelling dig-okr-10986417972024-07-17T02:20:25Z How Culturally Wise Psychological Interventions Help Reduce Poverty Thomas, Catherine Premand, Patrick Bossuroy, Thomas Abdoulaye Sambo, Soumaila Markus, Hazel Walton, Gregory POVERTY BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE PSYCHOLOGY CULTURE AGENCY GRADUATION ECONOMIC INCLUSION PSYCHOSOCIAL NO POVERTY SDG 1 GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING SDG 3 DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH SDG 8 Poverty is multidimensional, associated not only with a lack of financial resources, but also often social-psychological constraints, such as diminished agency and aspirations. Through a series of field experiments, this paper assesses the causal impacts of culturally wise interventions designed to build women’s agency on poverty reduction efforts in rural Niger. Moreover, the study identifies a model of agency that is “culturally wise” because it is the most motivational and functional in the study cultural context. Study 1 reports descriptive evidence that an interdependent model of agency—that is grounded in social harmony, respect, and collective advancement and that accounts for relational affordances for individual goals—is predominant in rural Niger. This stands in contrast to a more self-oriented, independent model grounded in personal aspirations, self-direction, and self-advancement that is more common in the West. Study 2 explores the psychosocial mechanisms of a highly effective, multifaceted poverty reduction program that included two psychosocial interventions—a community sensitization and a life skills training, which incorporated both models of agency. Although the results support the role of intrapersonal processes (including enhanced self-efficacy and optimistic future expectations) in driving economic impacts, there is equal, if not greater, support for relational processes (including increased subjective social standing, control over earnings, and social support). Study 3 conducts a mechanism experiment to disentangle the causal effects of interventions grounded in independent agency (“personal initiative”) or interdependent agency (“interpersonal initiative”). The results show that the interdependent agency intervention, which is considered to be most “culturally wise,” led to significant effects on economic outcomes as well as both intrapersonal and relational processes. By contrast, the independent agency intervention showed impacts on intrapersonal processes alone. These findings show the promise of an emerging area of research at the intersection of behavioral science, cultural psychology, and development economics for addressing complex global problems like poverty and inequality. 2024-06-28T16:25:09Z 2024-06-28T16:25:09Z 2024-06-28 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099025506262410295/IDU18c0fc4c619919149d8196051fa2f59845124 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41797 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper; 10824 CC BY 3.0 IGO https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC: World Bank
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 POVERTY
BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE
PSYCHOLOGY
CULTURE
AGENCY
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
NO POVERTY
SDG 1
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
SDG 3
DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
SDG 8
POVERTY
BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE
PSYCHOLOGY
CULTURE
AGENCY
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
NO POVERTY
SDG 1
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
SDG 3
DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
SDG 8
spellingShingle POVERTY
BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE
PSYCHOLOGY
CULTURE
AGENCY
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
NO POVERTY
SDG 1
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
SDG 3
DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
SDG 8
POVERTY
BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE
PSYCHOLOGY
CULTURE
AGENCY
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
NO POVERTY
SDG 1
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
SDG 3
DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
SDG 8
Thomas, Catherine
Premand, Patrick
Bossuroy, Thomas
Abdoulaye Sambo, Soumaila
Markus, Hazel
Walton, Gregory
How Culturally Wise Psychological Interventions Help Reduce Poverty
description Poverty is multidimensional, associated not only with a lack of financial resources, but also often social-psychological constraints, such as diminished agency and aspirations. Through a series of field experiments, this paper assesses the causal impacts of culturally wise interventions designed to build women’s agency on poverty reduction efforts in rural Niger. Moreover, the study identifies a model of agency that is “culturally wise” because it is the most motivational and functional in the study cultural context. Study 1 reports descriptive evidence that an interdependent model of agency—that is grounded in social harmony, respect, and collective advancement and that accounts for relational affordances for individual goals—is predominant in rural Niger. This stands in contrast to a more self-oriented, independent model grounded in personal aspirations, self-direction, and self-advancement that is more common in the West. Study 2 explores the psychosocial mechanisms of a highly effective, multifaceted poverty reduction program that included two psychosocial interventions—a community sensitization and a life skills training, which incorporated both models of agency. Although the results support the role of intrapersonal processes (including enhanced self-efficacy and optimistic future expectations) in driving economic impacts, there is equal, if not greater, support for relational processes (including increased subjective social standing, control over earnings, and social support). Study 3 conducts a mechanism experiment to disentangle the causal effects of interventions grounded in independent agency (“personal initiative”) or interdependent agency (“interpersonal initiative”). The results show that the interdependent agency intervention, which is considered to be most “culturally wise,” led to significant effects on economic outcomes as well as both intrapersonal and relational processes. By contrast, the independent agency intervention showed impacts on intrapersonal processes alone. These findings show the promise of an emerging area of research at the intersection of behavioral science, cultural psychology, and development economics for addressing complex global problems like poverty and inequality.
format Working Paper
topic_facet POVERTY
BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE
PSYCHOLOGY
CULTURE
AGENCY
GRADUATION
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
PSYCHOSOCIAL
NO POVERTY
SDG 1
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
SDG 3
DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
SDG 8
author Thomas, Catherine
Premand, Patrick
Bossuroy, Thomas
Abdoulaye Sambo, Soumaila
Markus, Hazel
Walton, Gregory
author_facet Thomas, Catherine
Premand, Patrick
Bossuroy, Thomas
Abdoulaye Sambo, Soumaila
Markus, Hazel
Walton, Gregory
author_sort Thomas, Catherine
title How Culturally Wise Psychological Interventions Help Reduce Poverty
title_short How Culturally Wise Psychological Interventions Help Reduce Poverty
title_full How Culturally Wise Psychological Interventions Help Reduce Poverty
title_fullStr How Culturally Wise Psychological Interventions Help Reduce Poverty
title_full_unstemmed How Culturally Wise Psychological Interventions Help Reduce Poverty
title_sort how culturally wise psychological interventions help reduce poverty
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2024-06-28
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099025506262410295/IDU18c0fc4c619919149d8196051fa2f59845124
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41797
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