Food Transfers, Cash Transfers, Behavior Change Communication and Child Nutrition: Evidence from Bangladesh

Author:

Ahmed Akhter1,Hoddinott John23ORCID,Roy Shalini3

Affiliation:

1. International Food Policy Research Institute , Dhaka   Bangladesh

2. Division of Nutritional Sciences, at the Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management, the Department of Global Development, Cornell University , Ithaca, NY , USA

3. International Food Policy Research Institute , Washington, DC , USA

Abstract

Abstract This paper reports the results of two 2-year randomized control trials in two poor rural areas of Bangladesh. Treatment arms included monthly cash transfers, monthly food rations of equivalent value to the cash transfers, and mixed monthly cash and food transfers, and treatment arms—one with food and one with cash—that combined transfers with nutrition-behavior communication change (BCC). This design enables a comparison of transfer modalities within the same experiment. Intent-to-treat estimators show that cash transfers and nutrition BCC had a large impact on nutritional status, a 0.25 standard deviation increase in height-for-age z-scores and a 7.8 percentage point decrease in stunting prevalence. No other treatment arm affected anthropometric outcomes. Mechanisms underlying these impacts are explored. Improved diets—particularly increased intake of animal source foods in the cash plus BCC arm—are consistent with the improvements observed in this paper.

Funder

German Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development

Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation

United Nations Development Programme

United States Agency for International Development

American Economic Association

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference65 articles.

1. Which Kinds of Social Safety Net Transfers Work Best for the Ultra Poor in Bangladesh?;Ahmed,2016

2. Transfers, Nutrition Programming, and Economic Well-Being: Experimental Evidence from Bangladesh;Ahmed;World Development,2024

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