Child Money and Food Stamps: A comparative analysis of Mongolian welfare programmes in the Ger Districts of Ulaanbaatar

Author:

Fox Elizabeth1

Affiliation:

1. Mongolia & Inner Asia Studies Unit (MIASU), Department of Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge, Free School Lane , Cambridge CB2 3RF England

Abstract

Abstract Until recently, the Mongolian welfare system was entirely category based. However, a new food stamps programme funded by loans from the Asian Development Bank, which targets aid according to proxy means testing, has been introduced as part of the bank’s aim to push Mongolia towards a fiscally sustainable welfare model. The food stamps programme is presented as efficient and responsible in contrast to Mongolia’s universal child money programme. Based on long-term participant observation research in the ger districts of Ulaanbaatar, areas inhabited by many rural-urban migrants living in poverty, this paper compares the two programmes, interweaving street-level accounts of the experiences of residents and bureaucrats alike with the respective histories and funding sources of the two programmes. Doing so provides a multi-level analysis of the emergent welfare state in Mongolia, unpicking the ‘system’ that ger district residents encounter, linking the relative influence of international financial institutions to democratic and economic cycles, and offering a critique of the supposed efficiency of targeted welfare programmes.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference77 articles.

1. ADB, Asian Development Bank (2015): Proposed Policy-Based Loan Mongolia: Social Welfare Support Program. Report and Recommendation of the President to the Board of Directors. Ulaanbaatar: Asian Development Bank.

2. Araujo, M. Caridad (2006): The Child Money Program and Properties of its Targeting Methodology. Washington DC: The World Bank.

3. Atwood, Christopher (2004): Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire. Bloomington: Indiana University.

4. Ben-Yehoyada, Naor (2015): “‘Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men’: the moral andpolitical scales of migration in the central Mediterranean”, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 22: 183–202.

5. Brochmann, Grete; Dølvik, Jon Erik (2018): “The Welfare State and International Migration: The European Challenge” in: Brent Greve (ed.): Routledge Handbook of the Welfare State. Routledge, 508–521.

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