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Unconditional Government Social Cash Transfer in Africa Does not Increase Fertility

Tia Palermo, Sudhanshu Handa, Amber Peterman, Leah Prencipe, David Seidenfeld and Innocenti Research Centre Unicef

Innocenti Working Papers

Abstract: In Africa, one of the key barriers to the scale-up of unconditional cash transfer programmes is the notion held by politicians, and even the general public, that such programmes will induce the poor to have more children. The hard evidence on this question is scanty. The current study uses evaluation data from the Zambian Child Grant Programme (CGP), a large-scale UCT targeted to households with a child under the age of five at programme initiation and evaluates the impact of transfers on fertility and child-fostering decisions. The overall goal of the CGP is to reduce extreme poverty and break the intergenerational transmission of poverty. The results contribute to the small literature that rigorously documents the fertility impacts of unconditional cash transfer programmes in developing countries.

Keywords: cash transfers; economic policy; fertility (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 40
Date: 2015
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-afr and nep-dev
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Journal Article: Unconditional government social cash transfer in Africa does not increase fertility (2016) Downloads
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