Journal Article

Journal of International Development 27

Targeting Social Transfer Programmes: Comparing Design and Implementation Errors Across Alternative Mechanisms

Published on 10 November 2015

An innovative cash transfer programme in northern Kenya is the first of its kind to trial three targeting mechanisms to learn about which approach is most effective at identifying the poorest households while minimising inclusion and exclusion errors. Analysing data collected through a randomised controlled trial, we conclude that community-based targeting is the most accurate of the three approaches, followed by categorical targeting by age and household dependency ratio.

However, targeting performance is strongly affected by implementation capacity and modalities. Through a simulation exercise, we show that a proxy means test would have performed better than single categorical indicators.

Authors

Rachel Sabates-Wheeler

Rural Futures Cluster Lead

Stephen Devereux

Research Fellow

Publication details

published by
Wiley
authors
Sabates-Wheeler, R., Hurrell, A. and Devereux, S.
journal
Journal of International Development, volume 27, issue 8

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About this publication

Programmes and centres
Centre for Social Protection

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