Employment Generation in Rural Africa : Mid-Term Results from an Experimental Evaluation of the Youth Opportunities Program in Northern Uganda
Can cash transfers promote employment and reduce poverty in rural Africa? Will lower youth unemployment and poverty reduce the risk of social instability? The authors experimentally evaluate one of Uganda's largest development programs, which...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2017
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/944601468192251018/Employment-generation-in-rural-Africa-mid-term-results-from-an-experimental-evaluation-of-the-Youth-Opportunities-Program-in-Northern-Uganda http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26827 |
Summary: | Can cash transfers promote employment
and reduce poverty in rural Africa? Will lower youth
unemployment and poverty reduce the risk of social
instability? The authors experimentally evaluate one of
Uganda's largest development programs, which provided
thousands of young people nearly unconditional, unsupervised
cash transfers to pay for vocational training, tools, and
business start-up costs. Mid-term results after two years
suggest four main findings. First, despite a lack of central
monitoring and accountability, most youth invest the
transfer in vocational skills and tools. Second, the
economic impacts of the transfer are large: hours of
non-household employment double and cash earnings increase
by nearly 50 percent relative to the control group. The
authors estimate the transfer yields a real annual return on
capital of 35 percent on average. Third, the evidence
suggests that poor access to credit is a major reason youth
cannot start these vocations in the absence of aid. Much of
the heterogeneity in impacts is unexplained, however, and is
unrelated to conventional economic measures of ability,
suggesting we have much to learn about the determinants of
entrepreneurship. Finally, these economic gains result in
modest improvements in social stability. Measures of social
cohesion and community support improve mildly, by roughly 5
to 10 percent, especially among males, most likely because
the youth becomes a net giver rather than a net taker in his
kin and community network. Most strikingly, we see a 50
percent fall in interpersonal aggression and disputes among
males, but a 50 percent increase among females. Neither
change seems related to economic performance nor does social
cohesion a puzzle to be explored in the next phase of the
study. These results suggest that increasing access to
credit and capital could stimulate employment growth in
rural Africa. In particular, unconditional and unsupervised
cash transfers may be a more effective and cost-efficient
forming of large-scale aid than commonly believed. A second
stage of data collection in 2012 will collect longitudinal
economic impacts, additional data on political violence and
behavior, and explore alternative theoretical mechanisms. |
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