1. Cash transfers, children and the crisis : protecting current and future investments
- Author
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Dena Ringold, Ariel Fiszbein, and Santhosh Srinivasan
- Subjects
Saving and Capital Investment ,Cash transfers ,Economic policy ,Income Distribution ,Safety net ,Children [INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH AREAS] ,Human Development ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Purchasing power ,Payment system ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Development ,Physical capital ,Youth J130 ,Family Planning ,Government Programs [Welfare and Poverty] ,Economics ,Child Care ,Financial Markets [Economic Development] ,Financial Crises G010 ,Provision and Effects of Welfare Programs I380 ,Finance ,Human Resources [Economic Development] ,Migration O150 ,Redistributive Effects ,business.industry ,Externalities [Taxation and Subsidies] ,Environmental Taxes and Subsidies H230 ,Corporate Finance and Governance O160 ,Fertility ,Financial crisis ,Safety Nets and Transfers,Services&Transfers to Poor,Access to Finance,Labor Policies,Debt Markets ,Fiscal sustainability ,Microeconomic Analyses of Economic Development O120 ,business ,Savings account - Abstract
Developing countries have responded to the multiple shocks from the food, fuel and finance crises of 2008-2009 with a mix of responses aimed at both mitigating the immediate impacts of the crises on households (and particularly children), and protecting future investments in human capital. While some countries have introduced new safety net programs, others have modified and/or expanded existing ones. Since many countries have introduced conditional cash transfers (CCTs) in recent years, these programs have been used as an important starting point for a response. This paper aims to describe how conditional cash transfers have been used by different countries to respond to the crises (e.g. by expanding coverage and/or increasing benefit amounts), distill lessons about their effectiveness as crisis-response programs, identify design features that can facilitate their ability to respond to transient poverty shocks, and assess how they can complement other safety net programs.
- Published
- 2011