Hidden Impact? Ex-Post Evaluation of an Anti-Poverty Program

Published
2003-05
Journal
1Metadata
Abstract
By the widely used difference-in-difference method, the Southwest China Poverty Reduction Project had little impact on the proportion of people in beneficiary villages consuming less than $1 a day-despite a public outlay of $400 million. Is that right, or is the true impact being hidden somehow? The authors find that impact estimates are quite sensitive to the choice of outcome indicator, the poverty line, and the matching method. There are larger poverty impacts at lower poverty lines. And there are much larger impacts on incomes than consumptions. Uncertainty about the impact probably made it hard for participants to infer the gain in permanent income, so they saved a high proportion of the short-term gain.Citation
“Chen, Shaohua; Ravallion, Martin. 2003. Hidden Impact? Ex-Post Evaluation of an Anti-Poverty Program. Policy Research Working Paper;No. 3049. World Bank, Washington, DC. © World Bank. https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/18187 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
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