Publication:
Behavioral Change Promotion, Cash Transfers and Early Childhood Development: Experimental Evidence from a Government Program in a Low-Income Setting

dc.contributor.author Premand, Patrick
dc.contributor.author Barry, Oumar
dc.date.accessioned 2022-09-30T13:57:23Z
dc.date.available 2022-09-30T13:57:23Z
dc.date.issued 2022-06-26
dc.description.abstract Signs of development delays and malnutrition are widespread among young children in low-income settings. Social protection programs such as cash transfers are increasingly combined with behavioral change promotion or parenting interventions to improve early childhood development. This paper disentangles the effects of behavioral change promotion from cash transfers to poor households through an experiment embedded in a government program in Niger. The study is also designed to identify within-community spillovers from the behavioral change intervention. The findings show that behavioral change promotion affects a range of practices related to nutrition, health, stimulation, and child protection. Moderate gains in children’s socio-emotional development are observed, but there is no improvement in anthropometrics or cognitive development. Cash transfers alone do not alter parenting practices or improve early childhood development. Cash transfers raise food security and consumption at the household level, including the purchase of non-food items privately consumed by adults. The behavioral intervention offsets these changes and instead improves children’s food security, pointing to some intra-household reallocations toward children. Local spillovers on parenting practices are found, which further highlights that cash alone is not the main driver of changes in parenting behaviors. en
dc.identifier.citation Journal of Development Economics
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10986/38091
dc.publisher Elsevier
dc.rights CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder World Bank
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/
dc.subject EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT
dc.subject PARENTING
dc.subject SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL CHANGE COMMUNICATION
dc.subject CASH TRANSFERS
dc.subject SPILLOVERS
dc.subject SAHEL
dc.subject AFRICA
dc.subject FIELD EXPERIMENT
dc.title Behavioral Change Promotion, Cash Transfers and Early Childhood Development en
dc.title.subtitle Experimental Evidence from a Government Program in a Low-Income Setting en
dc.type Journal Article en
dc.type Article de journal fr
dc.type Artículo de revista es
dspace.entity.type Publication
okr.associatedcontent https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2022.102921 Journal Article Version Record en
okr.date.disclosure 2023-12-26
okr.doctype Publications & Research :: Journal Article
okr.externalcontent External Content
okr.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2022.102921
okr.language.supported en
okr.peerreview Academic Peer Review
okr.sector Health and other social services :: Health
okr.theme Human development :: Education for all
okr.theme Human development :: Nutrition and food security
okr.topic Health, Nutrition and Population :: Health Economics & Finance
okr.topic Health, Nutrition and Population :: Health Indicators
okr.topic Health, Nutrition and Population :: Health Monitoring & Evaluation
okr.unit The World Bank
okr.volume 158
relation.isAuthorOfPublication 5a231532-1560-50a9-bcf7-6e4cd6e3ec2c
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