1 / 23

Cash Transfers Programming (CTP)

Cash Transfers Programming (CTP). Information and awareness. Location Date. Introduction to CTP CTP trends amongst actors and donors Response option analysis. Contents. What is CTP? Why some National Societies choose CTP Approaches to CTP Transfer modalities

blucille
Download Presentation

Cash Transfers Programming (CTP)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cash Transfers Programming (CTP) Information and awareness Location Date

  2. Introduction to CTPCTP trends amongst actors and donorsResponse option analysis

  3. Contents • What is CTP? • Why some National Societies choose CTP • Approaches to CTP • Transfer modalities • Mapping Red Cross Red Crescent CTP

  4. What is CTP? • CTP is the provision of assistance through cash or vouchers rather than providing food or materials. • It is not a programme objective itself; it is a means of implementing one.

  5. Why some NS choose CTP Humanitarianreasons • Empowerment and dignity • Choice and flexibility • Power transfer • Links response to recovery • Effective across sectors and in situations with varied needs Pragmatic reasons • Cost efficient • Multiplier effects • Support to local trade linked to economic recovery • Fewer costs for recipients

  6. Approaches to CTP CTP can be: • Conditional or unconditional • Targeted at a wide range of sectors • One-off or repeated payments • Blanket provision or targeted to specific groups • Implemented alone or in partnership with government agencies • Cash grants or vouchers

  7. Transfer modalities • cash – in the hand • cash cheque • transfer to bank account • remittance agents Cash resources can be transferred by: • post office • vouchers • prepaid cards • mobile phones

  8. Trends in CTP

  9. Contents: • Early examples of CTP • General trends in CTP • Agency trends in CTP • Donor trends in CTP • Research and publications

  10. Early examples of CTP • Franco-Prussian war, 1870 to 1871 • Cash for work(CFW) as a famine safety net response in India, late 19th century • Galveston floods, Texas, 1900 • Cash-based famine response India, 1948 • Large CFW projects in India, 1970s • Large CFW projects in Botswana, 1980s

  11. General trends in CTP • Focus on food and livelihoods sectors – starting to see this expand, especially in shelter • Focus on recovery and early recovery – although some use of unconditional cash in emergencies, rarely at scale • Work is under way on scaling up more quickly, on preparation and contingency planning, and on market assessment

  12. Agency trends in CTP • Creation of CaLP • WFP to meet food needs • UNHCR repatriation support • Trends in IFRC

  13. Donor trends in CTP (1) DG ECHO • Has a CTP policy • Works as an advocate amongst peers • Actively tracks CTP expenditure: trend is increasing over time DFID • HRR raised the possibility of a ‘cash first’ approach • DFID promotes more routine use of innovative approaches including CTPs

  14. Donor trends in CTP (2) USAID • No restriction on use of OFDA funds for CTPs • OFDA reporting a rapid expansion in the use of CTPs, approximately doubling over the last couple of years. Generally • No donor actively constraining the use of CTPs • No donor reported internal policy constraints

  15. Response option analysis How to determine which programmaticapproach is the most appropriate

  16. Response option analysis Contents: • What is it, and where does it fit? • ‘Blue sky’ thinking • Setting criteria • Scoring response options • Making recommendations • Summary

  17. What is it, and where does it fit?

  18. ‘Blue Sky’ thinking • Include all potential responses to identified needs • Don’t discard anything at this stage

  19. Criteria for scoring - examples • Priorities and capacity of the host National Society • Priorities and capacity of the affected population • Timeliness and seasonality • Probable impact, cost effectiveness • Potential for sustainability, links with recovery • Resources available

  20. Scoring response options • Score each option against each criterion • Not all factors have the same importance – add a weighting • Compare options to identify and justify most appropriate approaches

  21. Documentation • Response option analysis provides a justification for the selected approach • Allows objective comparison between possibilities • Increases programme quality • Very useful for communication

  22. Summary

  23. CTPInformation and awarenessThank you for your time!

More Related