Journal Article

IDS Bulletin Vol. 42 Nos. 6

Richer but Resented: What do Cash Transfers do to Social Relations?

Published on 7 November 2011

Cash transfers are an increasingly important component of social protection systems in most countries.

Usually, cash transfers are evaluated against their effects on poverty or human capital, with their impact on social relations within and between households relegated to discrete comments on ‘stigma’, ‘resentment’ and sharing, including reduction of remittances and other support. Using evidence from Oxford Policy Management’s evaluations of cash transfer programmes in Malawi and Zimbabwe, we suggest reconceptualising cash transfers as ongoing processes of intervention in a complex system of social relations. Cash transfer interventions operate through and affect this system at each stage: awareness-raising, targeting, payment, case management and monitoring and evaluation. We conclude that the impact of cash transfers on social relations is large and often negative. We argue that this is intrinsically important for wellbeing, but can also have negative consequences for material aspects of wellbeing, such as livelihoods.

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This article comes from the IDS Bulletin 42.6 (2011) Richer but Resented: What do Cash Transfers do to Social Relations?

Cite this publication

MacAuslan, I. and Riemenschneider, N. (2011) Richer but Resented: What do Cash Transfers do to Social Relations?. IDS Bulletin 42(6): 60-66

Authors

Ian MacAuslan
Nils Riemenschneider

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.1111/j.1759-5436.2011.00274.x

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Region
Malawi Zimbabwe

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