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| Autor/Autores: | Santosh Anagol, Thomas Fujiwara, Martin Navarrete | 
| Fecha de publicación: | 2025-05-15 | 
| Alcance geográfico: | Interregional | 
| Publicado en: | Estados Unidos | 
| Descargar: | Descargar PDF | 
| Resumen: | Conditionality can prevent poor households from receiving cash transfers. Re-analyzing five randomized evaluations of conditional cash transfers, we find: (1) non-compliers — households that do not meet education conditions — are common, representing 4.6% to 37% of eligible households; (2) non-compliers often have lower baseline consumption than compliers; (3) under standard social welfare function assumptions, a budget-neutral switch to unconditional cash transfers can raise the welfare gains from increased consumption by up to 46%, although we find important heterogeneity by context. Our results suggest that conditionality exacerbating consumption inequality can be quantitatively important for the welfare impacts of cash transfer programs. |