Money or Power? Choosing Covid-19 aid in Kenya
Susanna Berkouwer,
Pierre Biscaye,
Eric Hsu,
Oliver Kim,
Kenneth Lee,
Edward Miguel and
Catherine Wolfram
Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics, UC Berkeley, Working Paper Series from Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics, UC Berkeley
Abstract:
In response to the Covid-19 crisis, 186 countries implemented direct cash transfers to households, and 181 introduced in-kind programs that lowered the cost of utilities such as electricity, water, transport, and mobile money. During times of crisis, do people prefer in-kind transfers or cash, and why? In this paper, we compare electricity transfers against a benchmark of cash transfers (mobile money) among 2000 rural and urban residents of Kenya with pre-paid electricity meter connections. We offer participants an incentivized choice between electricity transfers or mobile money, totaling approximately USD 10 to 15, and then implement their choice over three months. We generate three main findings. First, participants overwhelmingly prefer cash, with three-quarters of participants opting for mobile money even when offered electricity tokens with a cash value that is 40 percent higher, possibly due to the flexibility in expenditures or credit constraints. Second, despite relatively low baseline electricity consumption, preference for cash is slightly lower in rural areas, possibly due to higher transaction costs for purchasing electricity, lower mobile money penetration, or savings constraints. Third, electricity tokens transfers generate a larger increase in electricity consumption than equivalent cash transfers, suggesting a role for mental accounting; however, we estimate no impact of either electricity or cash transfers on a broad set of socioeconomic outcomes. These patterns suggest that mobile money transfers generate larger welfare gains than electricity credit, at least in settings with high mobile money penetration.
Keywords: Economics; Applied Economics; Clinical Research; Development economics; Cash transfers; Electricity subsidies; Government programs; Utility subsidies; Kenya; Electrical and Electronic Engineering; Mechanical Engineering; Energy; Banking; finance and investment; Applied economics; Econometrics (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023-11-01
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ene and nep-pay
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Journal Article: Money or Power? Choosing Covid-19 aid in Kenya (2023) 
Working Paper: Money or Power? Choosing Covid-19 aid in Kenya (2023) 
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