The impacts of cash transfers on household energy choices

被引:4
作者
Chakrabarti, Averi [1 ]
Handa, Sudhanshu [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Amer Inst Res, 201 Jones Rd,Suite 100, Waltham, MA 02451 USA
[2] Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill UNC CH, Dept Publ Policy, Chapel Hill, NC USA
[3] Amer Inst Res, Nairobi, Kenya
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
cash transfers; energy; energy stacking; fuel choices; Malawi; solar; sub-Saharan Africa; wood; Zambia; LADDER; INTERVENTIONS; CONTAMINATION; CHALLENGE; COOKING; DEMAND; STOVES; HEALTH; WATER; WORK;
D O I
10.1111/ajae.12366
中图分类号
F3 [农业经济];
学科分类号
0202 ; 020205 ; 1203 ;
摘要
There are sizeable energy access deficits in the developing world. Leveraging panel data from the experimental impact evaluations of three unconditional cash transfer programs in Malawi and Zambia, we investigate how ultra-poor households in rural areas adapt their energy portfolios when experiencing exogenous increases in income. Households make several changes to the primary fuel sources that they use on a regular basis after receiving 3 to 4 years of transfers-moving from fires to torches for lighting purposes and reducing collected firewood use for cooking purposes. In general, households are more likely to make income-induced adjustments to lighting fuels than to cooking fuels. While facilitating some movement away from firewood (arguably the most inferior energy source), the unconditional cash transfers rarely enable households to completely abandon this fuel. This is understandable given the range of pressing needs facing the beneficiary households-such as food security, the enhancement of which is the primary purpose of the transfer programs. Although recipient households are able to meet a greater share of their energy needs with relatively improved fuels (such as charcoal/coal in Zambia) and obtain assets for generating solar power, the observed impacts are unlikely to be large enough to lead to meaningful health impacts (such as lower respiratory disease via reductions in indoor air pollution). However, the cash transfers appear to enhance well-being in other ways through the energy use channel-for example, by reducing the time households spend foraging for fuel resources.
引用
收藏
页码:1426 / 1457
页数:32
相关论文
共 82 条
[21]  
Bastagli F., 2016, Cash transfers: what does the evidence say. A rigorous review of programme impact and the role of design and implementation features
[22]   Learning, Hygiene and Traditional Medicine [J].
Bennett, Daniel ;
Naqvi, Asjad ;
Schmidt, Wolf-Peter .
ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 2018, 128 (612) :F545-F574
[23]   Access to modern energy: a review of barriers, drivers and impacts [J].
Bonan, Jacopo ;
Pareglio, Stefano ;
Tavoni, Massimo .
ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2017, 22 (05) :491-516
[24]   A Mixed-Method Review of Cash Transfers and Intimate Partner Violence in Low- and Middle-Income Countries [J].
Buller, Ana Maria ;
Peterman, Amber ;
Ranganathan, Meghna ;
Bleile, Alexandra ;
Hidrobo, Melissa ;
Heise, Lori .
WORLD BANK RESEARCH OBSERVER, 2018, 33 (02) :218-258
[25]   Citizen monitoring of waterways decreases pollution in China by supporting government action and oversight [J].
Buntaine, Mark T. ;
Zhang, Bing ;
Hunnicutt, Patrick .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2021, 118 (29)
[26]  
Cameron C., 2005, Micro econometrics using Stata
[27]  
Carolina Population Center (CPC), 2016, MALAWI SOCIAL CASH T
[28]  
Carolina Population Center (CPC), 2014, MALAWI SOCIAL CASH T
[29]   Stacking up the ladder: A panel data analysis of Tanzanian household energy choices [J].
Choumert-Nkolo, Johanna ;
Motel, Pascale Combes ;
Le Roux, Leonard .
WORLD DEVELOPMENT, 2019, 115 :222-235
[30]   Effects of public policy on child labor: Current knowledge, gaps, and implications for program design [J].
Dammert, Ana C. ;
de Hoop, Jacobus ;
Mvukiyehe, Eric ;
Rosati, Furio C. .
WORLD DEVELOPMENT, 2018, 110 :104-123