scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted ContentDOI

Progressing through progresa: an impact assessment of a school subsidy experiment

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The authors used a Markov schooling transition model applied to the experimental data to assess the impact of the educational subsidy program along several dimensions, including effects on initial ages of school entry, dropout rates, grade repetition rates, and school reentry rates.
Abstract
A new anti-poverty program in Mexico, PROGRESA, provides monetary transfers to families that are contingent upon their children's regular attendance at school. The benefit levels are intended to offset the opportunity costs of not sending children to school and vary with the grade level and gender of the child. The initial phase of the program was implemented as a randomized social experiment. This paper uses a Markov schooling transition model applied to the experimental data to assess the impact of the educational subsidy program along several dimensions, including effects on initial ages of school entry, dropout rates, grade repetition rates, and school reentry rates. The findings show that the program effectively reduces drop-out rates and facilitates progression through the grades, particularly during the transition from primary to secondary school. Results based on a simulation evaluating the effects of longer terms of exposure to the program indicate that if children were to participate in the program between ages 6 to 14, they would experience an increase of 0.6 years in average educational attainment levels years and an increase of 19% in the percentage of children attending junior secondary school.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

When and Why Incentives (Don't) Work to Modify Behavior

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss how extrinsic incentives may come into conflict with other motivations and examine the research literature on three important examples in which monetary incentives have been used in a non-employment context to foster the desired behavior: education, increasing contributions to public goods, and helping people change their lifestyles, particularly with regard to smoking and exercise.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cash or Condition? Evidence from a Cash Transfer Experiment

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of conditionality in cash transfer programs with two distinct interventions: unconditional transfers (UCT arm) and transfers conditional on school attendance (CCT arm) targeted at adolescent girls in Malawi on individual level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating the impact of conditional cash transfer programs

TL;DR: Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) as discussed by the authors is an alternative to more traditional social assistance programs and a demand-side complement to the supply of health and education services in developing economies.
BookDOI

Evaluating anti-poverty programs

TL;DR: This article reviewed the methods available for the ex-post counterfactual analysis of programs that are assigned exclusively to individuals, households or locations, and showed that no single method dominates; rigorous, policy-relevant evaluations should be open-minded about methodology.
Related Papers (5)