The impact of PROGRESA on community social relationships: final report

PROGRESA’s objective is to provide Mexican families living in extreme poverty access to opportunities for meeting their basic education, health and nutritional needs. It provides cash benefits linked to children’s school attendance and to families’ regular clinic visits, as well as health education...

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Autor principal: Adato, Michelle
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/156604
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author Adato, Michelle
author_browse Adato, Michelle
author_facet Adato, Michelle
author_sort Adato, Michelle
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description PROGRESA’s objective is to provide Mexican families living in extreme poverty access to opportunities for meeting their basic education, health and nutritional needs. It provides cash benefits linked to children’s school attendance and to families’ regular clinic visits, as well as health education and nutritional supplements. Economic analysis of PROGRESA’s system of household targeting found moderate advantages in relation to hypothetical geographic targeting or no-targeting scenarios. However, targeting involves social costs that need to be weighed into the analysis of the costs and benefits of alternative targeting systems. The research reported here examines these social costs, focusing on community social relationships, which can be seen as forms of social capital. Social capital is widely believed to be a factor in people’s ability to move out of poverty and facilitating development; thus, in addition to the intrinsic importance of strengthened or weakened social relationships, the extent to which PROGRESA contributes to or detracts from social capital has implications for the achievement of the program’s ultimate aims. Specifically, this report addresses the following questions: How do people in PROGRESA communities feel about the selection system? Is it perceived as fair, in concept and application? How do people feel as designated beneficiaries and non-beneficiaries? How does this differentiation affect the relationships between people in the two groups? Is there new social capital built as a result of PROGRESA?
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spelling CGSpace1566042025-02-24T06:47:42Z The impact of PROGRESA on community social relationships: final report Adato, Michelle social networks social behaviour cash transfers community participation PROGRESA’s objective is to provide Mexican families living in extreme poverty access to opportunities for meeting their basic education, health and nutritional needs. It provides cash benefits linked to children’s school attendance and to families’ regular clinic visits, as well as health education and nutritional supplements. Economic analysis of PROGRESA’s system of household targeting found moderate advantages in relation to hypothetical geographic targeting or no-targeting scenarios. However, targeting involves social costs that need to be weighed into the analysis of the costs and benefits of alternative targeting systems. The research reported here examines these social costs, focusing on community social relationships, which can be seen as forms of social capital. Social capital is widely believed to be a factor in people’s ability to move out of poverty and facilitating development; thus, in addition to the intrinsic importance of strengthened or weakened social relationships, the extent to which PROGRESA contributes to or detracts from social capital has implications for the achievement of the program’s ultimate aims. Specifically, this report addresses the following questions: How do people in PROGRESA communities feel about the selection system? Is it perceived as fair, in concept and application? How do people feel as designated beneficiaries and non-beneficiaries? How does this differentiation affect the relationships between people in the two groups? Is there new social capital built as a result of PROGRESA? 2000 2024-10-24T12:44:46Z 2024-10-24T12:44:46Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/156604 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155781 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Adato, Michelle. 2000. The impact of PROGRESA on community social relationships: final report. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/156604
spellingShingle social networks
social behaviour
cash transfers
community participation
Adato, Michelle
The impact of PROGRESA on community social relationships: final report
title The impact of PROGRESA on community social relationships: final report
title_full The impact of PROGRESA on community social relationships: final report
title_fullStr The impact of PROGRESA on community social relationships: final report
title_full_unstemmed The impact of PROGRESA on community social relationships: final report
title_short The impact of PROGRESA on community social relationships: final report
title_sort impact of progresa on community social relationships final report
topic social networks
social behaviour
cash transfers
community participation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/156604
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