BLT Temporary Unconditional Cash Transfer

The Bantuan Langsung Tunai (BLT) program had a clear and modest objective: supplement consumption for poor households facing unprecedented price increases. In 2005 subsidy cuts raised household fuel prices by an average of over 125 percent with 88,...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Jakarta 2017
Subjects:
BLT
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/652291468039239723/Bantuan-Langsung-Tunai-BLT-temporary-unconditional-cash-transfer
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26698
id okr-10986-26698
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-266982021-04-23T14:04:37Z BLT Temporary Unconditional Cash Transfer World Bank ADMINISTRATIVE COST ADMINISTRATIVE OVERHEAD AGRICULTURAL INPUTS AGRICULTURAL SECTOR BIASES BLT BUSINESS CAPITAL BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES CAPITA EXPENDITURE CASH TRANSFER PROGRAMS CASH TRANSFERS COMMUNITIES COMMUNITY HEALTH CONFLICT CORRELATES OF POVERTY CORRUPTION COST EFFECTIVENESS COST OF ACCESS CREDIT CRUNCH DEBT DISABLED DISTRIBUTION OF BENEFITS DISTRICT LEVEL DISTRICTS EARNINGS ECONOMIC CRISES ECONOMIC POLICY ECONOMIC SHOCKS ECONOMIC SURVEY EMPLOYEE EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES EMPLOYMENT STATUS EMPOWERMENT ENROLLMENT EPIDEMICS EQUALITY EXCHANGE RATES EXCLUSION EXPENDITURE FEMALE FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS FINANCIAL MARKETS FOOD BASKET FOOD CONSUMPTION FOOD EXPENDITURE FOOD ITEMS FOOD PRICES FOOD SECURITY GOVERNMENT POLICY HEALTH INSURANCE HOME IMPROVEMENTS HOUSEHOLD HEAD HOUSEHOLD INCOME HOUSEHOLD SURVEY HOUSEHOLD WELFARE HOUSEHOLD-LEVEL INCIDENCE OF POVERTY INCOME SUPPORT INFORMATION MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INSTALLMENTS INTERVENTIONS LABOR MARKETS LOANS FOR ENTREPRENEURS MALNUTRITION MICRO LOANS NEIGHBORHOODS NUTRITION NUTRITIONAL STATUS PHYSICAL CAPITAL POOR POOR CHILDREN POOR HOUSEHOLD POVERTY LINE POVERTY RATE POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES PUBLIC WORKS RECEIPT RECESSION RESERVE ACCOUNTS RURAL RURAL AREAS RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE PROGRAM SAFETY SAFETY NET SANITATION SAVINGS SCHOLARSHIP SOCIAL ASSISTANCE SOCIAL WELFARE SOURCE OF INFORMATION TARGETING TRANSFER AMOUNTS UMBRELLA ORGANIZATION URBAN AREAS VILLAGE VILLAGE LEVEL VULNERABLE HOUSEHOLDS WELFARE INDICATORS The Bantuan Langsung Tunai (BLT) program had a clear and modest objective: supplement consumption for poor households facing unprecedented price increases. In 2005 subsidy cuts raised household fuel prices by an average of over 125 percent with 88, 186, and 105 percent increases in gasoline, kerosene, and solar (diesel) fuels respectively. BLT, a direct cash transfer in four installments over one year, funded from the implied budgetary savings from subsidy reductions, was in many respects the most significant Government of Indonesia (GOI) response to these programmed increases in fuel prices. It was targeted to the poor households who were benefiting least from the old subsidy regime and most at risk from the negative impacts on consumption from price increases. A mostly-similar BLT was introduced again in 2008 when international crises in both financial markets and in food prices combined with another domestic reduction to fuel subsidies. BLT provided just-in-time cash assistance to households affected by an economic shock. BLT added cash amounts to a household's budget equal to approximately 15 percent of regular expenditures in 2005. These transfers were more than enough to cover increased expenditure on fuels. Benefits continued for one year as shocks from government policy reverberated through the rest of the macro-economy, allowing beneficiaries time to readjust spending patterns to new relative prices. 2017-05-22T17:06:25Z 2017-05-22T17:06:25Z 2012-02 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/652291468039239723/Bantuan-Langsung-Tunai-BLT-temporary-unconditional-cash-transfer http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26698 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Jakarta Economic & Sector Work :: Public Expenditure Review Economic & Sector Work East Asia and Pacific Indonesia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ADMINISTRATIVE COST
ADMINISTRATIVE OVERHEAD
AGRICULTURAL INPUTS
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
BIASES
BLT
BUSINESS CAPITAL
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CAPITA EXPENDITURE
CASH TRANSFER PROGRAMS
CASH TRANSFERS
COMMUNITIES
COMMUNITY HEALTH
CONFLICT
CORRELATES OF POVERTY
CORRUPTION
COST EFFECTIVENESS
COST OF ACCESS
CREDIT CRUNCH
DEBT
DISABLED
DISTRIBUTION OF BENEFITS
DISTRICT LEVEL
DISTRICTS
EARNINGS
ECONOMIC CRISES
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
ECONOMIC SURVEY
EMPLOYEE
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT STATUS
EMPOWERMENT
ENROLLMENT
EPIDEMICS
EQUALITY
EXCHANGE RATES
EXCLUSION
EXPENDITURE
FEMALE
FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FOOD BASKET
FOOD CONSUMPTION
FOOD EXPENDITURE
FOOD ITEMS
FOOD PRICES
FOOD SECURITY
GOVERNMENT POLICY
HEALTH INSURANCE
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
HOUSEHOLD HEAD
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
HOUSEHOLD-LEVEL
INCIDENCE OF POVERTY
INCOME SUPPORT
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION SYSTEM
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INSTALLMENTS
INTERVENTIONS
LABOR MARKETS
LOANS FOR ENTREPRENEURS
MALNUTRITION
MICRO LOANS
NEIGHBORHOODS
NUTRITION
NUTRITIONAL STATUS
PHYSICAL CAPITAL
POOR
POOR CHILDREN
POOR HOUSEHOLD
POVERTY LINE
POVERTY RATE
POVERTY REDUCTION
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES
PUBLIC WORKS
RECEIPT
RECESSION
RESERVE ACCOUNTS
RURAL
RURAL AREAS
RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE
RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE PROGRAM
SAFETY
SAFETY NET
SANITATION
SAVINGS
SCHOLARSHIP
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
SOCIAL WELFARE
SOURCE OF INFORMATION
TARGETING
TRANSFER AMOUNTS
UMBRELLA ORGANIZATION
URBAN AREAS
VILLAGE
VILLAGE LEVEL
VULNERABLE HOUSEHOLDS
WELFARE INDICATORS
spellingShingle ADMINISTRATIVE COST
ADMINISTRATIVE OVERHEAD
AGRICULTURAL INPUTS
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
BIASES
BLT
BUSINESS CAPITAL
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CAPITA EXPENDITURE
CASH TRANSFER PROGRAMS
CASH TRANSFERS
COMMUNITIES
COMMUNITY HEALTH
CONFLICT
CORRELATES OF POVERTY
CORRUPTION
COST EFFECTIVENESS
COST OF ACCESS
CREDIT CRUNCH
DEBT
DISABLED
DISTRIBUTION OF BENEFITS
DISTRICT LEVEL
DISTRICTS
EARNINGS
ECONOMIC CRISES
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
ECONOMIC SURVEY
EMPLOYEE
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT STATUS
EMPOWERMENT
ENROLLMENT
EPIDEMICS
EQUALITY
EXCHANGE RATES
EXCLUSION
EXPENDITURE
FEMALE
FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FOOD BASKET
FOOD CONSUMPTION
FOOD EXPENDITURE
FOOD ITEMS
FOOD PRICES
FOOD SECURITY
GOVERNMENT POLICY
HEALTH INSURANCE
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
HOUSEHOLD HEAD
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
HOUSEHOLD-LEVEL
INCIDENCE OF POVERTY
INCOME SUPPORT
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION SYSTEM
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INSTALLMENTS
INTERVENTIONS
LABOR MARKETS
LOANS FOR ENTREPRENEURS
MALNUTRITION
MICRO LOANS
NEIGHBORHOODS
NUTRITION
NUTRITIONAL STATUS
PHYSICAL CAPITAL
POOR
POOR CHILDREN
POOR HOUSEHOLD
POVERTY LINE
POVERTY RATE
POVERTY REDUCTION
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES
PUBLIC WORKS
RECEIPT
RECESSION
RESERVE ACCOUNTS
RURAL
RURAL AREAS
RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE
RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE PROGRAM
SAFETY
SAFETY NET
SANITATION
SAVINGS
SCHOLARSHIP
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
SOCIAL WELFARE
SOURCE OF INFORMATION
TARGETING
TRANSFER AMOUNTS
UMBRELLA ORGANIZATION
URBAN AREAS
VILLAGE
VILLAGE LEVEL
VULNERABLE HOUSEHOLDS
WELFARE INDICATORS
World Bank
BLT Temporary Unconditional Cash Transfer
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Indonesia
description The Bantuan Langsung Tunai (BLT) program had a clear and modest objective: supplement consumption for poor households facing unprecedented price increases. In 2005 subsidy cuts raised household fuel prices by an average of over 125 percent with 88, 186, and 105 percent increases in gasoline, kerosene, and solar (diesel) fuels respectively. BLT, a direct cash transfer in four installments over one year, funded from the implied budgetary savings from subsidy reductions, was in many respects the most significant Government of Indonesia (GOI) response to these programmed increases in fuel prices. It was targeted to the poor households who were benefiting least from the old subsidy regime and most at risk from the negative impacts on consumption from price increases. A mostly-similar BLT was introduced again in 2008 when international crises in both financial markets and in food prices combined with another domestic reduction to fuel subsidies. BLT provided just-in-time cash assistance to households affected by an economic shock. BLT added cash amounts to a household's budget equal to approximately 15 percent of regular expenditures in 2005. These transfers were more than enough to cover increased expenditure on fuels. Benefits continued for one year as shocks from government policy reverberated through the rest of the macro-economy, allowing beneficiaries time to readjust spending patterns to new relative prices.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title BLT Temporary Unconditional Cash Transfer
title_short BLT Temporary Unconditional Cash Transfer
title_full BLT Temporary Unconditional Cash Transfer
title_fullStr BLT Temporary Unconditional Cash Transfer
title_full_unstemmed BLT Temporary Unconditional Cash Transfer
title_sort blt temporary unconditional cash transfer
publisher World Bank, Jakarta
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/652291468039239723/Bantuan-Langsung-Tunai-BLT-temporary-unconditional-cash-transfer
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26698
_version_ 1764462519959683072