Community-Based Conditional Cash Transfers in Tanzania: Results from a Randomized Trial
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About this ebook
David Evans
David Evans is author of several books and other publications and productions on blues music and has received two Grammy Awards for Best Album Notes. He is also a 2023 inductee into the Blues Hall of Fame in the category of Individuals—Business, Production, Media, and Academic. His musical performance career has taken him to twenty-three countries and resulted in six CDs. Evans taught at California State University, Fullerton, and the University of Memphis, where he retired as professor of music emeritus.
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Community-Based Conditional Cash Transfers in Tanzania - David Evans
CHAPTER 1
Background
Motivation for Project
Conditional cash transfers (CCTs) have proven immensely effective in alleviating extreme poverty and improving health and education outcomes for children around the world (Fiszbein and Schady 2009; Baird et al. 2013). Evidence from across Latin America—and now growing evidence from other parts of the world—has demonstrated that CCTs can be an extremely effective mechanism for improving outcomes for families, children, and entire communities. In Africa, the evidence base remains more limited. For example, conditional cash transfers have improved health and education outcomes for children in Burkina Faso (Akresh, de Walque, and Kazianga 2012, 2013) and for adolescent girls in Malawi (Baird, McIntosh, and Özler 2011).¹
An increasing number of African countries are interested in implementing CCTs and have vulnerable populations that might benefit immensely from them. However, this raises the important question of what is the best way to operate CCT programs in different institutional contexts—especially those in which the central government would find it difficult to administer all aspects of the program. This project introduced a model of CCTs that relies heavily on local communities to target and to administer the program—more so than most CCT programs in the past. Because initial project funds did not have sufficient resources to benefit all low-income households, the project design included random assignment of which villages would initially receive the cash transfer program, accompanied by a rigorous impact evaluation. In the time since this project was launched, a host of CCT programs have grown up around the African continent. This project seeks to add to the evidence base informing these and future