1 / 12

Evaluating Brazil’s Bolsa Família Program:

Evaluating Brazil’s Bolsa Família Program:. Do Local Governments Matter?. Pui Shen Yoong International Politics & Economics Honors Thesis April 20, 2012. Presentation Outline. Context: Brazil & the Bolsa Família Program Research Question Methodology Quantitative Findings

fergus
Download Presentation

Evaluating Brazil’s Bolsa Família Program:

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. Evaluating Brazil’s Bolsa Família Program: Do Local Governments Matter? Pui Shen Yoong International Politics & Economics Honors Thesis April 20, 2012

  2. Presentation Outline • Context: Brazil & the Bolsa Família Program • Research Question • Methodology • Quantitative Findings • Qualitative Findings • Conclusion

  3. Brazil – A Country of Contrasts Mean per capita income (PPP US$ of 2005) Source: World Bank.

  4. The Bolsa Família Program • Conditional cash transfer program • Cash in exchange for schooling/nutrition ‘conditionalities’: • Pregnant women : pre-natal care • Children aged 0 – 6 : vaccination, monitoring • Children aged 6 – 15 : minimum attendance 85 % • Teenagers aged 16 – 17 : minimum attendance 75 % • Families who earn <140 reais per capita (80 USD) a month • Allowances from 32 to 306 reais (20 – 180 USD) a month

  5. Decentralized Management

  6. Research Question • “How does local government capacity affect the program’s ability to improve beneficiaries’ health & education across municipalities?”

  7. Methodology: Regression Analysis INDEPENDENT VARIABLE DEPENDENT VARIABLE Effect on health/education -- % of beneficiaries complying with health/education requirements 853 municipalities in Minas Gerais state Municipal fixed-effects model (i=municipality, t=year) Administrative Capacity % of beneficiaries monitored for compliance with health/education requirements

  8. Methodology: Case Studies Araçuaí Capelinha Belo Horizonte Contagem Human Development Index by Municipality, Minas Gerais, 2000

  9. Quantitative Results • Monitoring rates have significant and positive effect on compliance rates, both for health & education. • Population size, degree of urbanization, program coverage rates, log of tax revenue – no significant effect. Neither do supply-side factors (health teams, social assistance centers) • But why/how do monitoring rates affect compliance rates?

  10. Qualitative Results • Cross-sector collaboration – health, education, social assistance departments • Administrative Structure • Financial capacity does not explain differences in compliance rates

  11. Conclusion Local government capacity matters! • Investment in building monitoring capacity (MDS & municipalities) • Incentives for horizontal collaboration among local-level agents

  12. THANK YOU! Pui Shen Yoong psyoong@gmail.com Questions? Comments?

More Related