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Development Impact Group

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Overview

Global policymakers confront urgent challenges to enhance the lives of 700 million people in extreme poverty and tackle issues like climate change, fragility, and gender empowerment. Additionally, over the next decade, 1.1 billion young individuals in low and middle-income nations will enter the workforce. Social Protection and Jobs (SPJ) policies are vital for hastening poverty reduction, reducing food insecurity, improving employment prospects, and advancing Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Themes

The Development Impact Group’s Social Protection and Jobs program aims to identify the most impactful and scalable policies to address these global challenges. It spans the most common Social Protection and Jobs policies and instruments across four inter-linked areas:

Cash Transfers and Public Works

The Development Impact Group conducts original policy research and compiles evidence summaries on cash transfers and public works, which are the most common social protection programs in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). For instance, cash transfer programs have been shown to have relatively persistent effects, while public works have positive effects on beneficiaries' employment and earnings in the short-term that tend to fade in the medium run.

Adaptive Social Protection and Climate Resilience

The Development Impact Group studies how to increase household resilience before climatic shocks, including in FCV settings. Research shows that interventions that promote livelihood diversification or land recuperation to raise agricultural productivity can help households mitigate the effects of future climatic shocks. The Development Impact group has also analyzed how to optimize response to shocks. Anticipatory action for floods in Nepal or shock-responsive cash transfers for drought in Niger have led to faster impacts on food security compared to regular post-disaster assistance after climatic shocks.

Economic Inclusion Programs

The Development Impact Group analyzes how multifaceted economic inclusion (or graduation) programs designed to address multiple constraints improve poor households’ livelihoods, income, food security, resilience and women’s empowerment. Findings from Afghanistan, Niger, or the Sahel show that economic inclusion programs are high-return investments and induce sustained impacts, including when delivered through government systems and across rural, urban, and fragile settings. The Development Impact Group is assessing how to effectively scale these programs through an impact collaborative with the Partnership for Economic Inclusion.

Jobs for the Poor

The Development Impact Group assesses how to improve employment prospects in formal wage jobs and SMEs, in off-farm activities and informal micro-enterprises, and in agriculture, with a focus on women, people in poverty and vulnerable individuals. For instance, ongoing work shows that dual apprenticeships are attractive for youths and help firms fill open positions, and they induce medium to long-term impacts on youth earnings. Findings from economic inclusion programs show large effects on women’s labor force participation and micro-enterprise revenues. School-feeding interventions involving the transition from a centralized meal production model to locally procured meals in poverty pockets in Jordan increased women’s employment, income, savings, and non-food expenditures.

Partnerships

The Development Impact Group works in close collaboration with the World Bank Social Protection and Jobs Global Practice (GP), including on key initiatives such as the Partnership for Economic Inclusion (PEI) and the Sahel Adaptive Social Protection (ASP) Program, the World Food Programme (WFP), government counterparts, and a wide variety of technical partners. DIME also leverages cross-sectoral synergies with other Development Impact Goup programs on gender, fragility (crime, conflict, and violence), education, private sector development, and agriculture, in collaboration with partner GPs. 

Publications

Reviews and Meta-Analysis

Cash Transfers: Intervention Size and Persistence

Do Public Works Programs Have Sustained Impacts? A Review of Experimental Studies from LMICs

Cash Transfers and Public Works

Do Workfare Programs Live Up to Their Promises? Experimental Evidence from Cote D’Ivoire

Reducing Hunger with Payments for Environmental Services (PES): Experimental Evidence from Burkina Faso

Can Environmental Cash Transfers Reduce Deforestation and Improve Social Outcomes? A Regression Discontinuity Analysis of Mexico's National Program (2011-2014)

Did COVID-19 Market Disruptions Disrupt Food Security? Evidence from Households in Rural Liberia and Malawi

Behavioral Change Promotion, Cash Transfers and Early Childhood Development: Experimental Evidence from a Government Program in a Low-Income Setting

Cash and Conflict: Large-Scale Experimental Evidence from Niger

Adaptive Social Protection and Climate Resilience

Cash transfers, climatic shocks and resilience in the Sahel

Safety nets and natural disaster mitigation: evidence from cyclone Phailin in Odisha

Transfers, Diversification and Household Risk Strategies: Can productive safety nets help households manage climatic variability?

Economic Inclusion Programs

Tackling psychosocial and capital constraints to alleviate poverty

No Household Left Behind: Afghanistan Targeting the Ultra Poor Impact Evaluation

Savings Facilitation or Capital Injection? Impacts and Spillovers of Livelihood Interventions in Post-Conflict Côte d’Ivoire

How Culturally Wise Psychological Interventions Help Reduce Poverty

Impact of the productive inclusion measures of the Burkin Naong Sa Ya program (2019-2020)

Program targeting with machine learning and mobile phone data: Evidence from an anti-poverty intervention in Afghanistan

Jobs for the Poor

Vocational Training for Disadvantaged Youth in Colombia: A Long-Term Follow-Up

Direct and Indirect Effects of Subsidized Dual Apprenticeships

A way out? Evidence from two Trials of the Mafita Apprenticeship and Community-Based Skills Training Programs in Northern Nigeria

Entrepreneurship Education and Entry into Self-Employment Among University Graduates

The Medium-Term Impact of Entrepreneurship Education on Labor Market Outcomes: Experimental Evidence from University Graduates in Tunisia

Factor Market Failures and the Adoption of Irrigation in Rwanda

Leaning in at Home: Women’s Promotions and Intra-household Bargaining in Bangladesh

Monitoring in Target Contracts: Theory and Experiment in Kenyan Public Transit

Promoting E-Commerce in Georgia: Exploring Constraints to Online Participation using Baseline Data from an Experimental Study

Small Firms Through the Pandemic: The Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in Sao Paulo (Brazil)

Core Team