A social analysis of the Red de Protección Social (RPS) in Nicaragua

The Government of Nicaragua‘s program Red de Protección Social (RPS) represents a new approach to providing safety nets for the poorest people in society, a conditional cash-transfer program that has become an important part of poverty alleviation strategy in several countries in Latin America and e...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Adato, Michelle, Roopnaraine, Terry, Álvarez, Fabiola Alvarado, Peña, Leticia Böttel, Castrillo, Gladys Meléndez
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157411
_version_ 1855521236320256000
author Adato, Michelle
Roopnaraine, Terry
Álvarez, Fabiola Alvarado
Peña, Leticia Böttel
Castrillo, Gladys Meléndez
author_browse Adato, Michelle
Castrillo, Gladys Meléndez
Peña, Leticia Böttel
Roopnaraine, Terry
Álvarez, Fabiola Alvarado
author_facet Adato, Michelle
Roopnaraine, Terry
Álvarez, Fabiola Alvarado
Peña, Leticia Böttel
Castrillo, Gladys Meléndez
author_sort Adato, Michelle
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Government of Nicaragua‘s program Red de Protección Social (RPS) represents a new approach to providing safety nets for the poorest people in society, a conditional cash-transfer program that has become an important part of poverty alleviation strategy in several countries in Latin America and elsewhere in the world. What is so important about CCTs is that first, they take a systematic approach to assuring a basic income safety net for the poor, rather than relying on more diffuse, indirect process of poverty reduction, e.g. through demand-driven infrastructure programs; and second, they aim to do more than just put short-term cash in people‘s hands—important as this aspect of safety nets is—but also to invest in the long-term human capital of future generations. They achieve this by conditioning cash transfers on participation of households in health and education services, based on the premise that attention to early children health, nutrition and education significantly increases these children‘s chances of climbing out of poverty later in life. In RPS, beneficiaries must attend health education workshops every two months; bring children to prescheduled preventative healthcare appointments and ensure current vaccinations for children between 0-5 years old; ensure an 85 percent school attendance record for children between 7-13, through 4th grade. In return, beneficiaries receive a cash transfer intended for the purchase of food (and improving diet quality); those with eligible school-age children also receive three cash transfers for school attendance, school supplies, and the teacher transfer to be given to the teacher
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace157411
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2004
publishDateRange 2004
publishDateSort 2004
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute
publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1574112025-02-24T06:48:35Z A social analysis of the Red de Protección Social (RPS) in Nicaragua Adato, Michelle Roopnaraine, Terry Álvarez, Fabiola Alvarado Peña, Leticia Böttel Castrillo, Gladys Meléndez safety equipment poverty alleviation cash transfers demand functions The Government of Nicaragua‘s program Red de Protección Social (RPS) represents a new approach to providing safety nets for the poorest people in society, a conditional cash-transfer program that has become an important part of poverty alleviation strategy in several countries in Latin America and elsewhere in the world. What is so important about CCTs is that first, they take a systematic approach to assuring a basic income safety net for the poor, rather than relying on more diffuse, indirect process of poverty reduction, e.g. through demand-driven infrastructure programs; and second, they aim to do more than just put short-term cash in people‘s hands—important as this aspect of safety nets is—but also to invest in the long-term human capital of future generations. They achieve this by conditioning cash transfers on participation of households in health and education services, based on the premise that attention to early children health, nutrition and education significantly increases these children‘s chances of climbing out of poverty later in life. In RPS, beneficiaries must attend health education workshops every two months; bring children to prescheduled preventative healthcare appointments and ensure current vaccinations for children between 0-5 years old; ensure an 85 percent school attendance record for children between 7-13, through 4th grade. In return, beneficiaries receive a cash transfer intended for the purchase of food (and improving diet quality); those with eligible school-age children also receive three cash transfers for school attendance, school supplies, and the teacher transfer to be given to the teacher 2004 2024-10-24T12:49:37Z 2024-10-24T12:49:37Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157411 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157381 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Adato, Michelle; Roopnaraine, Terry; Álvarez, Fabiola Alvarado; Peña, Leticia Böttel; Castrillo, Gladys Meléndez. 2004. A social analysis of the Red de Protección Social (RPS) in Nicaragua. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157411
spellingShingle safety equipment
poverty alleviation
cash transfers
demand functions
Adato, Michelle
Roopnaraine, Terry
Álvarez, Fabiola Alvarado
Peña, Leticia Böttel
Castrillo, Gladys Meléndez
A social analysis of the Red de Protección Social (RPS) in Nicaragua
title A social analysis of the Red de Protección Social (RPS) in Nicaragua
title_full A social analysis of the Red de Protección Social (RPS) in Nicaragua
title_fullStr A social analysis of the Red de Protección Social (RPS) in Nicaragua
title_full_unstemmed A social analysis of the Red de Protección Social (RPS) in Nicaragua
title_short A social analysis of the Red de Protección Social (RPS) in Nicaragua
title_sort social analysis of the red de proteccion social rps in nicaragua
topic safety equipment
poverty alleviation
cash transfers
demand functions
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157411
work_keys_str_mv AT adatomichelle asocialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua
AT roopnaraineterry asocialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua
AT alvarezfabiolaalvarado asocialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua
AT penaleticiabottel asocialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua
AT castrillogladysmelendez asocialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua
AT adatomichelle socialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua
AT roopnaraineterry socialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua
AT alvarezfabiolaalvarado socialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua
AT penaleticiabottel socialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua
AT castrillogladysmelendez socialanalysisofthereddeproteccionsocialrpsinnicaragua