Bonilla Juan, Zarzur Rosa Castro, Handa Sudhanshu, Nowlin Claire, Peterman Amber, Ring Hannah, Seidenfeld David
American Institutes for Research (AIR), USA.
University of Maryland, USA.
World Dev. 2017 Jul;95:55-72. doi: 10.1016/j.worlddev.2017.02.017. Epub 2017 Mar 7.
The empowerment of women, broadly defined, is an often-cited objective and benefit of social cash transfer programs in developing countries. Despite the promise and potential of cash transfers to empower women, the evidence supporting this outcome is mixed. In addition, there is little evidence from programs at scale in sub-Saharan Africa. We conducted a mixed-methods evaluation of the Government of Zambia's Child Grant Program, a poverty-targeted, unconditional transfer given to mothers or primary caregivers of young children aged zero to five. The quantitative component was a four-year longitudinal clustered-randomized control trial in three rural districts, and the qualitative component was a one-time data collection involving in-depth interviews with women and their partners stratified on marital status and program participation. Our study found that women in beneficiary households were making more sole or joint decisions (across five out of nine domains); however, impacts translated into relatively modest increases in the number of decision domains a woman is involved in, on average by 0.34 (or a 6% increase over a baseline mean of 5.3). Qualitatively, we found that changes in intrahousehold relationships were limited by entrenched gender norms, which indicate men as heads of household and primary decision makers. However, women's narratives showed the transfer increased financial empowerment as they were able to retain control over transfers for household investment and savings for emergencies. We highlight methodological challenges in using intrahousehold decision making as the primary indicator to measure empowerment. Results show potential for unconditional cash transfer programs to improve the financial and intrahousehold status of female beneficiaries, however it is likely additional design components are need for transformational change.
广义而言,妇女赋权是发展中国家社会现金转移项目经常提及的目标和益处。尽管现金转移有望并有可能赋予妇女权力,但支持这一结果的证据好坏参半。此外,撒哈拉以南非洲地区大规模项目的相关证据很少。我们对赞比亚政府的儿童补助项目进行了一项混合方法评估,该项目是一项针对贫困家庭的无条件转移支付,给予零至五岁幼儿的母亲或主要照料者。定量部分是在三个农村地区进行的为期四年的纵向整群随机对照试验,定性部分是一次性数据收集,包括对按婚姻状况和项目参与情况分层的妇女及其伴侣进行深入访谈。我们的研究发现,受益家庭中的妇女做出的单独或共同决策更多(在九个领域中的五个领域);然而,这种影响转化为妇女参与决策领域数量的相对适度增加,平均增加0.34个(相对于基线平均值5.3增加了6%)。从定性角度来看,我们发现家庭内部关系的变化受到根深蒂固的性别规范的限制,这些规范将男性视为户主和主要决策者。然而,妇女的叙述表明,转移支付增强了她们的经济权能,因为她们能够保留对转移支付的控制权,用于家庭投资和应急储蓄。我们强调了将家庭内部决策作为衡量赋权的主要指标时所面临的方法学挑战。结果表明,无条件现金转移项目有潜力改善女性受益人的经济状况和家庭内部地位,然而,可能需要额外的设计要素才能实现变革性变化。