现金、条件与儿童发展:来自洪都拉斯现金转移计划的实验证据

F. Boo, J. Creamer
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引用次数: 8

摘要

摘要:本研究探讨了洪都拉斯随机分配的有条件现金转移(Bono 10,000)对儿童早期发展的影响。我们发现0至60个月的儿童认知发展有显著影响,平均影响为0.13个标准差。我们显示了不同类型转移的不同影响:接受健康转移的家庭中0到5岁的孩子从该计划中获益显著,而接受教育转移的家庭中0到5岁的孩子,目标是只有0到5岁的孩子,目标是6到18岁的孩子,没有感受到好处。与其他程序相比,这种影响的影响是相当大的(平均0.34个标准差)。尽管整个项目似乎略微改变了一些可能影响儿童的行为(即,降低了母亲就业的可能性,增加了母亲的自尊),但我们没有发现Bono对这些变量的异质影响。造成这种结果的主要原因是条件的不同:教育部分只对学龄儿童施加条件,而健康转移则要求对0至5岁儿童进行定期健康检查。健康转移家庭更有可能参加健康检查,这可能导致了改善儿童健康和认知发展的行为改变,包括购买更有营养的食物。这些结果表明,没有明确目标条件的现金可能不会对幼儿的发展有效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cash, Conditions, and Child Development: Experimental Evidence from a Cash Transfer Program in Honduras
ABSTRACT:We explore the effects of a randomly assigned conditional cash transfer in Honduras (Bono 10,000) on early childhood development. We find significant impacts on cognitive development in children aged zero to sixty months, with an average effect of 0.13 standard deviations. We show differential impacts by type of transfer: zero- to five-year-old children from families receiving the health transfer, which targeted families with zero- to five-year-old children only, benefited significantly from the program, whereas zero- to five-year-olds in families receiving the education transfer, which targeted six- to eighteen-year-olds, perceived no benefit. In comparison with other programs, the effect of this impact is sizable (0.34 standard deviations, on average). Although the overall program appears to have slightly changed some behaviors that might affect children (namely, decreased probability of maternal employment and increased maternal self-esteem), we did not find heterogeneous impacts of the Bono across these variables. Results are explained mainly by differences in conditions: while the education component imposed conditions only on children of school age, the health transfer required regular health checkups of zero- to five-year-old children. The health transfer families were more likely to attend health checkups, which may have induced behavioral changes that improved children's health and cognitive development, including purchasing more nutritious food. These results imply that cash without well-targeted conditions might not be as effective for the development of young children.
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