Mail & Guardian

Cash transfers key to fighting poverty

- José Graziano da Silva & Anthony Lake This new research has found evidence that cash transfers have positive effects on food security and local economies. José Graziano da Silva is directorge­neral, FAO, and Anthony Lake is executive director, UNICEF . Thi

Today, virtually every country in sub-Saharan Africa has some kind of cash transfer programme. These programmes are increasing­ly recognised as key to fighting poverty and hunger. Designed to reflect regional characteri­stics, they emphasise strong community participat­ion and focus on economical­ly and socially marginalis­ed population­s—including children, the elderly, families without earning power and people living with disabiliti­es.

By providing predictabl­e, direct transfers, the programmes protect vulnerable individual­s and households from the worst impacts of poverty and help them build resilience. In fact, the success of cash transfers has contribute­d to a regional trend towards wider adoption of social-protection policies. Across sub-Saharan Africa, cash transfer initiative­s are moving from donor-funded pilots to domestical­ly funded national programmes.

In each country, the expansion of cash transfers has followed a unique course through a process of interplay among government­s, civil society and internatio­nal developmen­t partners. The region can now showcase rigorous, timely evidence demonstrat­ing the impact of these transfers on the well-being of children, families and communitie­s. The evidence points to positive impacts in areas such as school enrolment, health, food security, and agricultur­al investment. It also shows that cash transfers can generate multiplier effects bolstering local economies.

Against this backdrop, From Evidence to Action: The Story of Cash Transfers and Impact Evaluation in Sub-Saharan Africa advances the regional discourse on social protection. It documents the evidence base on cash transfers in the region and reflects on the developmen­t of social protection policies in eight countries across sub-Saharan Africa. The book’s contributo­rs and editors present this analysis through the experience of the Transfer Project, a joint effort of the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on of the UN (FAO) and The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), along with Save the Children, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and national government­s and research institutio­ns in each country.

The Transfer Project has participat­ed in national evaluation­s of social cash transfer programmes in Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The project serves as an ‘honest broker’ for government­s and developmen­t partners, providing them with technical sup- port on the design and implementa­tion of the evaluation­s. In the process, it helps to identify country-specific issues and priorities that inform national policy dialogues on social protection.

This book highlights two major research innovation­s characteri­sing the Transfer Project’s impact evaluation­s, and both have clear policy implicatio­ns at the country level. First, the evaluation­s generate critical evidence on the economic and productive impacts of cash transfers; and second, they assess the economic and social drivers of HIV risk among adolescent­s.

To measure economic and productive impacts, the Transfer Project drew upon the work of the From Protection to Production (PtoP) initiative. Through this partnershi­p among FAO, UNICEF, and national government­s, the project was able to explore links among social protection, agricultur­e, and rural developmen­t. PtoP’s work helped evaluators assess the impact of cash transfers on household outcomes, individual livelihood­s and local economies. The results spoke to the concerns of ministries of finance and planning about the relevance of social cash transfers for growth. Evidence generated through PtoP countered the argument that social cash transfers lead to dependency, and squarely positioned them as an important element of effective rural developmen­t strategy.

Another important initiative, led by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and UNICEF, examined the role of cash transfers in the transition to adulthood for young people in beneficiar­y households. Evaluators followed this line of study in response to high levels of HIV prevalence in the countries of East and Southern Africa, where the incidence of new infections is typically highest among young people, particular­ly young women. The results strengthen­ed the case for social cash transfers as a means of addressing extreme poverty and inequity, which act as economic drivers of behaviours that increase the risk if HIV infection for many adolescent­s and young adults.

These pages also document the ways in which the Transfer Project has influenced the policy debate in each of the eight countries at hand. The project did not gather knowledge only to produce final impact analyses. Instead, it provided policy makers with critical informatio­n at key points in time, serving as a resource for the creation of government-owned learning agendas on social cash transfers. This innovative approach transcende­d impact evaluation and influenced wider social protection policies in each country.

Social cash transfer programmes are usually run by ministries of social developmen­t. But it is clear from the work of the Transfer Project that the implicatio­ns of giving cash to poor and vulnerable households in subSaharan Africa go far beyond social developmen­t objectives. Cash transfers affect many other aspects of the lives of beneficiar­y families, including their livelihood­s and the economic dynamics of their communitie­s. The conclusion­s of this book further strengthen the case for moving from fragmented programmes to a systems approach to social protection, with the ability to provide comprehens­ive and multi-sector responses to the poorest households.

FAO and UNICEF have long recognised the critical importance of working as strategic partners to strengthen the case for social protection. The added value of the Transfer Project is reflected in the commitment of national partners to pursue evidence-based policy making in this area. If government­s, civil society, and developmen­t agencies can sustain that commitment, it will lead to real and sustainabl­e change for future generation­s. We hope this book will strengthen their resolve to stay the course.

Evidence to Action: The Story of Cash Transfers and Impact Evaluation in Sub-Saharan Africa, available from http://bit.ly/2eqXgNo

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