Women are the primary recipients of many welfare programs around the world. Despite frequent claims that targeting women induces beneficial consumption shifting and gender equality, the empirical evidence on the effect of targeting is relatively scarce. We report on a highly powered intervention that randomly allocates weekly transfers to a man or woman within the household. We use detailed financial diaries to look at the impact of the recipient's gender on expenditure, income, saving, nutrition and measures of decision-making. Our results show little evidence for consumption shifting at the household level but indicate that targeted transfers empower female recipients
This study attempts to replicate experimental results from Chowdhury et al. published in SouthernEco...
Since India's independence in 1947, economists, scholars, and practitioners coming from various deve...
In Economics, the term Homo economicus has always been assumed to be gender-neutral. Increasingly, h...
Women are the primary recipients of many welfare programs around the world. Despite frequent claims ...
This paper studies the differential effect of targeting cash transfers to men or women on the struct...
AbstractMany development interventions target transfers to women. However, little evidence directly ...
Many development interventions target transfers to women. However, little evidence directly explores...
Summary This paper evaluates the behavioral impact of conditionality and gender targeting on spendin...
Malawi Social Cash Transfer scheme is a social protection program designed to alleviate poverty, red...
We use a very special data set from a recent Brazilian social program to in-vestigate the existence ...
We use a randomized design to analyze the effects of unconditional cash transfers to women on the fo...
This dataset is constructed from two successive Household Income and Expenditure Surveys (HIES) cond...
In many conditional cash transfer (CCT) programmes worldwide— including Brazil’s Bolsa Família—cash ...
Cash transfer programs have been shown to be a successful tool in reducing poverty by multinational ...
The literature suggests men and women have different preferences. This paper exploits a random assig...
This study attempts to replicate experimental results from Chowdhury et al. published in SouthernEco...
Since India's independence in 1947, economists, scholars, and practitioners coming from various deve...
In Economics, the term Homo economicus has always been assumed to be gender-neutral. Increasingly, h...
Women are the primary recipients of many welfare programs around the world. Despite frequent claims ...
This paper studies the differential effect of targeting cash transfers to men or women on the struct...
AbstractMany development interventions target transfers to women. However, little evidence directly ...
Many development interventions target transfers to women. However, little evidence directly explores...
Summary This paper evaluates the behavioral impact of conditionality and gender targeting on spendin...
Malawi Social Cash Transfer scheme is a social protection program designed to alleviate poverty, red...
We use a very special data set from a recent Brazilian social program to in-vestigate the existence ...
We use a randomized design to analyze the effects of unconditional cash transfers to women on the fo...
This dataset is constructed from two successive Household Income and Expenditure Surveys (HIES) cond...
In many conditional cash transfer (CCT) programmes worldwide— including Brazil’s Bolsa Família—cash ...
Cash transfer programs have been shown to be a successful tool in reducing poverty by multinational ...
The literature suggests men and women have different preferences. This paper exploits a random assig...
This study attempts to replicate experimental results from Chowdhury et al. published in SouthernEco...
Since India's independence in 1947, economists, scholars, and practitioners coming from various deve...
In Economics, the term Homo economicus has always been assumed to be gender-neutral. Increasingly, h...