Can Micro-Credit Support Public Health Subsidy Programs?

B. Malde, Bet Caeyers, Britta Augsburg
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The low take-up of cost-effective and highly subsidised preventive health technologies in low-income countries remains a puzzle. One under-studied reason is that the design of subsidy schemes is such that households remain financially constrained. This paper analyses whether, and how, micro-finance supports a large public health subsidy program in the developing world -- the Swachh Bharat Mission -- in achieving its aim of increasing uptake of individual household latrines. Exploiting a cluster randomised controlled experiment of a sanitation micro-finance program that coincided with the launch of the SBM program, and unique survey data matched to administrative data, findings reveal that the complementarity runs on two levels: First, micro-credit allows households officially ineligible for the subsidy to invest in sanitation by alleviating credit constraints. Second, micro-credit also helps subsidy eligible households to overcome short-term liquidity constraints induced by the remuneration-post-verification subsidy design to invest in sanitation. Subsidy eligible households living in areas experiencing large delays in subsidy disbursement, or high toilet costs, are more likely to take a sanitation loan, but less likely to use the loan to construct a toilet.
小额信贷能支持公共卫生补贴计划吗?
低收入国家对具有成本效益和高补贴的预防保健技术的接受程度低仍然是一个谜。一个未被充分研究的原因是,补贴计划的设计使得家庭在财务上仍然受到限制。本文分析了小额信贷是否以及如何支持发展中国家的一项大型公共卫生补贴计划(Swachh Bharat Mission)实现其增加个人家庭厕所使用率的目标。利用与SBM计划同时启动的卫生小额信贷计划的集群随机对照实验,以及与行政数据相匹配的独特调查数据,发现互补性在两个层面上运行:首先,小额信贷允许正式不符合补贴资格的家庭通过缓解信贷限制来投资卫生设施。其次,小额信贷还有助于补贴符合条件的家庭克服短期流动性限制,这些限制是由验证后补偿补贴设计引起的,用于投资卫生设施。生活在补贴支付严重滞后或厕所成本高的地区的符合补贴条件的家庭更有可能获得卫生贷款,但不太可能使用贷款建造厕所。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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