Question
Financing and Cost-effectiveness of Cash Transfer Schemes: What does the evidence base on the costing, financing and cost effectiveness of cash transfer schemes tell us?
Helpdesk response
Key findings: There is widespread agreement in the literature that cash transfers are effective in achieving a range of development objectives and that fears of creating dependency or enabling misuse of funds by recipients are groundless. While there are many impact evaluations of cash transfer programmes, there is very little hard data on cost-effectiveness, particularly compared with other types of interventions. There are wide variations in what costs are included in calculations, uncertainty in valuing benefits, and differences in programme objectives and methods, making like-for-like comparisons difficult. Key lessons emerging from the literature are:
There is also widespread agreement that cash transfer programmes are no more expensive than other types of development interventions, but that in most low-income countries it is unlikely that large-scale programmes can be funded purely from domestic resources.
Full response: http://www.gsdrc.org/docs/open/HD701.pdf