加速生育时机以获取现金转移?来自极端贫困家庭的证据

Accelerating birth timing to access cash transfers? Evidence from households in extreme poverty

Journal of Health Economics · 2026
被引 0
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

研究尼日利亚农村极端贫困家庭中,针对孕妇的开放式现金转移项目是否导致非孕妇加速生育以获取现金,发现四年内扭曲效应较弱,原因在于女性对现金有自主控制权并倾向于投资自身生意。

Abstract

There has been a sustained rise in cash transfer programs to the poor, and burgeoning interest in interventions promoting early childhood development. We draw together these trends to study whether open enrolment interventions targeting cash transfers to pregnant mothers unintentionally induce those not pregnant to accelerate birth timing in order to start receiving the cash. Our study context is rural Northern Nigeria, where households have high demand for liquidity because they are reliant on volatile earnings from agriculture, are subject to frequent natural and man-made aggregate shocks, and reside in communities with imperfect credit markets. Our evidence comes from an evaluation of an intervention providing high-valued unconditional cash transfers to pregnant mothers, with four years of open enrolment. We examine how this impacts pregnancy timing among 1700 women not pregnant at baseline. We document relatively weak distortionary impacts on pregnancy timing over the four year period of open enrolment. The reasons are women retain full control over the use of cash transfers, they have productive investment opportunities in their own businesses, and they choose to invest in those rather than transfer cash to husbands. This constellation of factors allows women to internalize the marginal benefits and costs of accelerating birth timing, and place a brake on the incentives households otherwise have to accelerate birth timing. On external validity, we draw together 45 DHS surveys to classify countries into those more or less likely to see distortionary effects on birth timing from open enrolment interventions targeting cash transfers to pregnant mothers.

现金转移支付生育时机极端贫困尼日利亚农村