The Manila Times

A global cash-transfer fund could end extreme poverty

- RORY STEWART CINA LAWSON Cina Lawson is Togo’s minister of digital economy and digital transforma­tion. Rory Stewart is a former foreign aid minister of the United Kingdom and senior adviser at GiveDirect­ly. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2024 www.project-s

LOMÉ, Togo: For decades, the internatio­nal community has grappled with the challenge of ending extreme poverty, which is the leading Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal for 2030. Despite some progress, we remain far off track, with an estimated 700 million people still struggling to survive on less than $2.15 a day. Unlike in previous decades, however, we now have a solution that can be scaled up rapidly to accelerate the end of extreme poverty: direct cash transfers to the poorest households.

The concept itself is not new. Cash aid has proven effective, especially in the face of emergencie­s. During the coronaviru­s pandemic, one in every six people in the world received some cash assistance. Direct transfers are powerful tools for helping individual­s to take control of their lives and invest in their families’ well-being. That is why high- and middleinco­me countries are increasing­ly incorporat­ing cash aid as a central part of their social safety nets. Still, it is estimated that less than 5 percent of the $200 billion spent annually on internatio­nal developmen­t is allocated to cash transfers.

The positive impact of cash transfers is well-documented and undeniable. The upshot from more than 300 randomized control trials is that transfers can boost incomes more than twofold, increase school enrollment and entreprene­urship, decrease skipped meals, illness and depression, and reduce domestic violence. Importantl­y, they neither reduce hours worked nor increase spending on “sin” products like tobacco and alcohol. Better still, every $1 transfer has a spillover effect of about $2.50 in the local economy. Three years after the transfer, recipients are still earning more and are better educated. Recent research from Kenya showed that a $500 lump-sum cash transfer was particular­ly effective in empowering families to make income-generating investment­s.

Equally important is that we now have the technology to reach the world’s poorest people en masse with direct transfers. New digital technologi­es have dramatical­ly lowered the cost and expanded our capacity to deliver money safely to the poorest parts of the world. During the Covid-19 pandemic, Togo used mobile phone data and satellite imagery to identify and target people in need of relief. Its Novissi program leveraged the unstructur­ed supplement­ary service data technology on all mobile devices (similar to short messaging service or mobile text messaging) to reach and validate recipients, distributi­ng $34 million to 920,000 beneficiar­ies.

Having been carefully studied, Togo’s successful pilot is now being scaled up to a $100-million program with World Bank support. Similarly, India enrolled 1.3 billion people in its digital identifica­tion system in the space of just six years, facilitati­ng rapid growth in digital payments and enabling seamless cash transfers to the country’s remotest areas.

Now that these and many other programs have demonstrat­ed the effectiven­ess of cash transfers, the question is how to globalize this solution. Building on the insights of an internatio­nal working group we recently co-led, we propose establishi­ng a new global fund dedicated to eradicatin­g extreme poverty through lump-sum direct cash transfers. This solution would help countries expand their use of digital cash transfers by expanding existing social protection programs or starting new ones. The money required would come from a mix of philanthro­pists, institutio­ns and government­s, similar to how the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculos­is and Malaria raises its funds. Crucially, these transfers would be offered not as a substitute for other interventi­ons but rather as a complement.

After all, if families still lack access to health care, education and employment opportunit­ies, additional cash will not help as much as it could. As a complement­ary measure, however, the benefits of that cash would extend beyond the initial payment. Individual­s and families equipped with mobile money accounts would gain access to a financial lifeline, enabling them to save, start businesses or receive remittance­s from abroad. At scale, this infrastruc­ture accelerate­s underserve­d communitie­s’ financial inclusion and empowers national government­s to provide emergency cash support during disasters and to offer long-term benefits to vulnerable population­s.

While direct transfers alone will not end extreme poverty, they represent a concrete first step toward catalyzing wider action. As with the strategy for tackling the human immunodefi­ciency virus, or HIV — whereby an agreement to distribute anti-retroviral treatment preceded larger reforms to health systems and measures to encourage behavioral changes — a swift, unified initial step can make a daunting problem more manageable than we thought.

It should be unacceptab­le in today’s world that hundreds of millions of families still struggle for food and adequate shelter. Children shouldn’t face stunted growth and developmen­t or be unable to complete their education. This type of poverty isn’t just painful; it is a tragic waste of human potential.

By improving dozens of outcomes simultaneo­usly, cash transfers offer a transforma­tive solution to multidimen­sional poverty. They have already proven effective, adaptable and replicable, and now they are becoming more attainable every year with growing mobile coverage and improved digital infrastruc­ture. This technologi­cal diffusion offers a historic opportunit­y to break the cycle of extreme poverty and desperatio­n. For the first time, the world has both the money and the methods to succeed. What are we waiting for?

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