Role of Cash in Conditional Cash Transfer Programmes for Child Health, Growth, and Development: an Analysis of Mexico’s Oportunidades

Details

Research Team

Lia C.H. Fernald, Paul J. Gertler, Lynnette M. Neufeld

Topic

Early Childhood Development

Publication

Journal publication

Country

Mexico

Region

Latin America & Caribbean

Tags

child development, conditional cash transfers, poverty

Study Overview

Many governments have implemented conditional cash transfer (CCT) programmes with the goal of improving options for poor families through interventions in health, nutrition, and education. Families enrolled in CCT programmes receive cash in exchange for complying with certain conditions: preventive health requirements and nutrition supplementation, education, and monitoring designed to improve health outcomes and promote positive behaviour change. Our aim was to disaggregate the effects of cash transfer from those of other programme components.

Study Results

A doubling of cash transfers was associated with higher height-for-age Z score, lower prevalence of stunting, lower body-mass index for age percentile, and lower prevalence of being overweight. A doubling of cash transfers was also associated with children doing better on a scale of motor development, three scales of cognitive development, and with receptive language. Our results suggest that the cash transfer component of Oportunidades is associated with better outcomes in child health, growth, and development.

Intervention: Conditional cash transfer program