Does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food? Findings from a field experiment

To explore whether choices for transfers are influenced by peer monitoring, we examine private versus public choices among monetarily equivalent values of cash and food in northern Kenya. Many northern Kenyan communities face high-levels of chronic food insecurity and are tightly-knit, often sharing...

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Main Authors: Lentz, Erin C., Ouma, R., Mude, Andrew G.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77697
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author Lentz, Erin C.
Ouma, R.
Mude, Andrew G.
author_browse Lentz, Erin C.
Mude, Andrew G.
Ouma, R.
author_facet Lentz, Erin C.
Ouma, R.
Mude, Andrew G.
author_sort Lentz, Erin C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description To explore whether choices for transfers are influenced by peer monitoring, we examine private versus public choices among monetarily equivalent values of cash and food in northern Kenya. Many northern Kenyan communities face high-levels of chronic food insecurity and are tightly-knit, often sharing food aid transfers. Yet, humanitarian cash transfers are relatively new to the area. Whether cash will be subject to the same sharing norms is not well understood. Utilizing a randomized block experiment, we find that assigning a respondent to choose in front of peers decreases the likelihood of choosing a cash transfer relative to at least some food. We argue that peer monitoring decreases the value of cash relative to food in two inter-related ways. Choosing food in public, first, provides an opportunity for respondents to publicly demonstrate a commitment to local food aid sharing norms. Second, choosing cash in public may be riskier since cash does not yet have established sharing norms. A critical implication is that transfer choices and retargeting of resources within the community can be influenced by use of public or private discussions when eliciting community views, especially in communities where sharing is a salient social norm.
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spelling CGSpace776972024-05-01T08:18:44Z Does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food? Findings from a field experiment Lentz, Erin C. Ouma, R. Mude, Andrew G. food security To explore whether choices for transfers are influenced by peer monitoring, we examine private versus public choices among monetarily equivalent values of cash and food in northern Kenya. Many northern Kenyan communities face high-levels of chronic food insecurity and are tightly-knit, often sharing food aid transfers. Yet, humanitarian cash transfers are relatively new to the area. Whether cash will be subject to the same sharing norms is not well understood. Utilizing a randomized block experiment, we find that assigning a respondent to choose in front of peers decreases the likelihood of choosing a cash transfer relative to at least some food. We argue that peer monitoring decreases the value of cash relative to food in two inter-related ways. Choosing food in public, first, provides an opportunity for respondents to publicly demonstrate a commitment to local food aid sharing norms. Second, choosing cash in public may be riskier since cash does not yet have established sharing norms. A critical implication is that transfer choices and retargeting of resources within the community can be influenced by use of public or private discussions when eliciting community views, especially in communities where sharing is a salient social norm. 2016-12 2016-11-10T15:03:36Z 2016-11-10T15:03:36Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77697 en Limited Access Elsevier Lentz, E., Ouma, R. and Mude, A. 2016. Does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food? Findings from a field experiment. Food Policy 65:21–31.
spellingShingle food security
Lentz, Erin C.
Ouma, R.
Mude, Andrew G.
Does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food? Findings from a field experiment
title Does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food? Findings from a field experiment
title_full Does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food? Findings from a field experiment
title_fullStr Does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food? Findings from a field experiment
title_full_unstemmed Does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food? Findings from a field experiment
title_short Does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food? Findings from a field experiment
title_sort does peer monitoring influence choices between cash and food findings from a field experiment
topic food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77697
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