Targeting for Social Safety Nets : Evidence from Nine Programs in the Sahel

Proxy-Means Testing (PMT) and Community-Based Targeting (CBT) are among the most widely used methods for poverty targeting in low-income settings. This paper analyzes household data from nine programs implemented in the Sahel region using a harmoni...

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Main Authors: Schnitzer, Pascale, Stoeffler, Quentin
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/322721635209806009/Targeting-for-Social-Safety-Nets-Evidence-from-Nine-Programs-in-the-Sahel
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36434
id okr-10986-36434
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-364342021-10-29T05:10:48Z Targeting for Social Safety Nets : Evidence from Nine Programs in the Sahel Schnitzer, Pascale Stoeffler, Quentin TARGETING SOCIAL PROGRAMS SOCIAL SAFETY NETS SOCIAL PROTECTION POVERTY COMMUNITY-BASED TARGETING CASH TRANSFERS BENEFIT ALLOCATION SAHEL Proxy-Means Testing (PMT) and Community-Based Targeting (CBT) are among the most widely used methods for poverty targeting in low-income settings. This paper analyzes household data from nine programs implemented in the Sahel region using a harmonized approach to compare PMT and CBT selection as conducted in practice, once geographical targeting has been applied. The results show that the targeting performance measured depends critically on the definition of the targeting objectives, share of beneficiaries selected, and indexes used to evaluate targeting. While PMT performs better in reaching the poorest households based on per capita consumption, it differs little from CBT, or a random or universal allocation of benefits when distances to poverty lines are considered. When aiming to identify food insecure households, most PMT and CBT targeting schemes perform no better than a random allocation of benefits. On the other hand, targeting costs represent only a small share of budgets. Overall, the results emphasize the need to study programs as implemented in practice instead of relying on simulations of targeting performance, as widely used by practitioners and academics. Taken together, the findings suggest that while there may be a need to select households resulting from budget constraints, PMT and CBT contribute little to poverty or food insecurity reduction efforts in poor and homogeneous settings. 2021-10-28T16:24:19Z 2021-10-28T16:24:19Z 2021-10 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/322721635209806009/Targeting-for-Social-Safety-Nets-Evidence-from-Nine-Programs-in-the-Sahel http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36434 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9816 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Africa Sahel
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic TARGETING SOCIAL PROGRAMS
SOCIAL SAFETY NETS
SOCIAL PROTECTION
POVERTY
COMMUNITY-BASED TARGETING
CASH TRANSFERS
BENEFIT ALLOCATION
SAHEL
spellingShingle TARGETING SOCIAL PROGRAMS
SOCIAL SAFETY NETS
SOCIAL PROTECTION
POVERTY
COMMUNITY-BASED TARGETING
CASH TRANSFERS
BENEFIT ALLOCATION
SAHEL
Schnitzer, Pascale
Stoeffler, Quentin
Targeting for Social Safety Nets : Evidence from Nine Programs in the Sahel
geographic_facet Africa
Sahel
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9816
description Proxy-Means Testing (PMT) and Community-Based Targeting (CBT) are among the most widely used methods for poverty targeting in low-income settings. This paper analyzes household data from nine programs implemented in the Sahel region using a harmonized approach to compare PMT and CBT selection as conducted in practice, once geographical targeting has been applied. The results show that the targeting performance measured depends critically on the definition of the targeting objectives, share of beneficiaries selected, and indexes used to evaluate targeting. While PMT performs better in reaching the poorest households based on per capita consumption, it differs little from CBT, or a random or universal allocation of benefits when distances to poverty lines are considered. When aiming to identify food insecure households, most PMT and CBT targeting schemes perform no better than a random allocation of benefits. On the other hand, targeting costs represent only a small share of budgets. Overall, the results emphasize the need to study programs as implemented in practice instead of relying on simulations of targeting performance, as widely used by practitioners and academics. Taken together, the findings suggest that while there may be a need to select households resulting from budget constraints, PMT and CBT contribute little to poverty or food insecurity reduction efforts in poor and homogeneous settings.
format Working Paper
author Schnitzer, Pascale
Stoeffler, Quentin
author_facet Schnitzer, Pascale
Stoeffler, Quentin
author_sort Schnitzer, Pascale
title Targeting for Social Safety Nets : Evidence from Nine Programs in the Sahel
title_short Targeting for Social Safety Nets : Evidence from Nine Programs in the Sahel
title_full Targeting for Social Safety Nets : Evidence from Nine Programs in the Sahel
title_fullStr Targeting for Social Safety Nets : Evidence from Nine Programs in the Sahel
title_full_unstemmed Targeting for Social Safety Nets : Evidence from Nine Programs in the Sahel
title_sort targeting for social safety nets : evidence from nine programs in the sahel
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/322721635209806009/Targeting-for-Social-Safety-Nets-Evidence-from-Nine-Programs-in-the-Sahel
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36434
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