de Hoop Jacobus, Groppo Valeria, Handa Sudhanshu
UNICEF Office of Research-Innocenti, Florence, Italy.
public policy, Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.
World Bank Econ Rev. 2020 Oct;34(3):670-697. doi: 10.1093/wber/lhz004. Epub 2019 Nov 2.
Cash transfer programs are rapidly becoming a key component of the social safety net of many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. The primary aim of these programs is to help households improve their food security and smooth consumption during periods of economic duress. However, beneficiary households have also been shown to use these programs to expand their microentrepreneurial activities. Cluster-randomized trials carried out during the rollout of large-scale programs in Malawi and Zambia reveal that children may increase their work in the household enterprise through such programs. Both programs increased forms of work that may be detrimental to children, such as activities that expose children to hazards in Malawi and excessive working hours in Zambia. However, both programs also induced positive changes in other child well-being domains, such as school attendance and material well-being, leading to a mixed and inconclusive picture of the implications of these programs for children.
现金转移计划正迅速成为撒哈拉以南非洲许多国家社会安全网的关键组成部分。这些计划的主要目标是帮助家庭改善粮食安全,并在经济困难时期平稳消费。然而,有证据表明受益家庭也利用这些计划来扩大其微型企业活动。在马拉维和赞比亚大规模实施这些计划期间进行的整群随机试验表明,儿童可能会通过此类计划增加其在家庭企业中的劳动。这两个计划都增加了可能对儿童有害的劳动形式,例如在马拉维使儿童接触危险的活动,以及在赞比亚过长的工作时间。然而,这两个计划也在其他儿童福利领域引发了积极变化,例如上学出勤率和物质福利,导致这些计划对儿童影响的情况喜忧参半,尚无定论。