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We use a randomized controlled trial to study the response of poor households in rural Kenya to unconditional cash transfers from the NGO GiveDirectly. The transfers differ from other programs in that they are explicitly unconditional, large, and concentrated in time. We randomized at both the village and household levels; furthermore, within the treatment group, we randomized recipient gender (wife versus husband), transfer timing (lump-sum transfer versus monthly installments), and transfer magnitude (US404 PPP versus US1, 525 PPP). We find a strong consumption response to transfers, with an increase in household monthly consumption from 158 PPP to 193 PPP nine months after the transfer began. Transfer recipients experience large increases in psychological well-being. We find no overall effect on levels of the stress hormone cortisol, although there are differences across some subgroups. Monthly transfers are more likely than lump-sum transfers to improve food security, whereas lump-sum transfers are more likely to be spent on durables, suggesting that households face savings and credit constraints. Together, these results suggest that unconditional cash transfers have significant impacts on economic outcomes and psychological well-being.
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Johannes Haushofer
Cornell University
Jeremy Shapiro
Cleveland State University
The Quarterly Journal of Economics
Busara Center for Behavioral Economics
Busara Center for Behavioral Economics
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Haushofer et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d950e47fca1f84ab684ac5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/qje/qjw025