The newest edition of our RECOVR Roundup.
View this email in your browser
[link removed]
[link removed]
More evidence, less poverty
RECOVR Roundup Newsletter
Social Protection in the Time of COVID-19
Welcome to the 32nd edition of our RECOVR Roundup. For those of you who are new to IPA's mailing list, the RECOVR Roundup is a newsletter where we share new findings and analysis from the RECOVR Research Hub
[link removed]
and from our partner organizations—as well as links on what is happening in the Social Protection landscape in response to COVID-19.
As always, we encourage you to write to our team
mailto:
[email protected]?subject=RECOVR%20Roundup
with ideas for features.
New Findings & Analysis
Ghana: Unpacking a multi-part program to build sustainable income for the very poor
Ingredients of a program that work together might not work on their own
Ultra poor graduation programs, which aim to graduate the poorest of the poor out of extreme poverty, have grown in popularity
[link removed]
following evidence for their effectiveness. But the programs, which provide a package of multiple things at once—a productive asset grant (like goats), cash support while they’re getting started, coaching, and a savings account—are expensive. So researchers have been working to understand which of the components seem to be the critical ones. In Ghana
[link removed]
, Banerjee
[link removed]
, Karlan
[link removed]
, Osei
[link removed]
, Trachtman
[link removed]
, & Udry
[link removed]
compared the full model to just getting goats or a savings account. By three years later, while participants who got the full model were doing better, those who just got one of the individual components were not. (Ungated version below. And we have to give credit to the authors for the best "Highlights" summary we’ve seen in the online version
[link removed]
).
Read More
[link removed]
What We're Reading & Watching
Over ten years after the Social Protection Floor Advisory Group
[link removed]
recommended the universalization of social protection floors—minimum sets of social protections available throughout someone’s life—they have yet to materialize. The UN has called for the creation of a global fund for social protection
[link removed]
to help make universal social protection floors a reality.
Adding to the discussion on social protection floors, Martin Evans of the UK think tank ODI Evans has proposed
[link removed]
a focus on older populations, the severely disabled, and children in lone-parent households and others worse off for targeting social floors. Since these groups do not require any test of income or wealth, he argues that targeting them in the short run would be cheaper and more cost-effective than immediately introducing full universal social protection floors.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February marked the start of a new displacement crisis. If you’ve been following the World Bank’s global COVID-19 social protection and labor tracker
[link removed]
(Gentilini et al., in version 16 now), then you will be pleased to know that a parallel “living paper”
[link removed]
(version 1) tracking social protection responses in Ukraine and neighboring countries has been released which makes good reading for organizations with a social protection mandate or interest. A new version is scheduled to come out Friday, March 18th, and will probably be here
[link removed]
.
As the evidence base grows, more researchers are trying to understand what scales effectively
[link removed]
, including working with governments to test policy changes at scale. Jean Drèze looks at a case study
[link removed]
of a study at a large scale in Bihar, India. He offers a thoughtful critique of the authors’ interpretation, and an invitation to discuss what dangers might arise from researchers working with governments on large-scale studies.
Take a world video tour of social protection
[link removed]
and journey into the diversity of initiatives underway all over the world. This collective video project “Social Protection for all!” compiles short videos from around the world where people and organizations answer the simple question: “Why does social protection matter to us?”
If you’d prefer to not receive these Roundup emails in the future, you can manage your email preferences or unsubscribe here
[link removed]
.
DONATE
[link removed]
| RESEARCH
[link removed]
| IMPACT
[link removed]
| WORK WITH IPA
[link removed]
poverty-action.org
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
Sent to
[email protected] by Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA)
Innovations for Poverty Action
655 15th St. NW, Suite 800
Washington, DC xxxxxx
[email protected]
mailto:
[email protected]
Manage Your Email Preferences
[link removed]
| Forward This Email
[link removed]