OtherOpen Access
Food transfers, cash transfers, behavior change communication and child nutrition: Evidence from Bangladesh
Authors
Author Affiliations
International Food Policy Research Institute, Cornell University
Year2019
Citations65
Abstract
The importance of children’s nutritional status for subsequent human capital formation, the limited evidence of the effectiveness of social protection interventions on child nutrition, and the absence of knowledge on the intra-household impacts of cash and food transfers or how they are shaped by complementary programming motivate this paper. We implemented two, linked randomized control trials in rural Bangladesh, with treatment arms including cash transfers, a food ration, or a mixed food and cash transfer, as well as treatments where cash and nutrition behavior change communication (BCC) or where food and nutrition BCC were provided. Only cash plus nutrition BCC had a significant impact on nutritional status, but its effect on height-for-age z scores (HAZ) was large, 0.25SD. We explore…
View at Publisher
BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.