Downloads
WP201433.pdf
PDF | 968.72 KB
We evaluate the large scale pilot of an innovative and major welfare intervention in Colombia, which combines homes visits by trained social workers to households in extreme poverty with preferential access to social programs. We use a randomized control trial and a very rich dataset collected as part of the evaluation to identify program impacts on the knowledge and take-up of social programs and the labor supply of targeted households. We find no consistent impact of the program on these outcomes, possibly because the way the pilot was implemented resulted in very light treatment in terms of home visits. Importantly, administrative data indicates that the program has been rolled out nationally in a very similar fashion, suggesting that this major national program is likely to fail in making a significant contribution to reducing extreme poverty. We suggest that the program should undergo substantial reforms, which in turn should be evaluated.
Authors
CPP Co-Director
Orazio is an International Research Fellow at the IFS, a Professor at Yale and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Research Fellow Institute for Fiscal Studies
Laura is a Research Fellow at IFS. Her current work focuses on tax and social protection policy and programme evaluation in developing countries.
Research Fellow University College London
Pedro is a Professor of Economics at University College London and an economist in the IFS' Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice (cemmap).
Associate Director
I completed a PhD at UCL in 2020. My work examines the drivers of variation in the quantity and quality of healthcare provided to different patients.
Kai Barron
Working Paper details
- DOI
- 10.1920/wp.ifs.2014.1433
- Publisher
- IFS
Suggested citation
Abramovsky, L et al. (2014). Challenges to promoting social inclusion of the extreme poor: evidence from a large scale experiment in Colombia. London: IFS. Available at: https://ifs.org.uk/publications/challenges-promoting-social-inclusion-extreme-poor-evidence-large-scale-experiment-0 (accessed: 29 March 2024).
More from IFS
Understand this issue
Spring Budget 2024: What you need to know
7 March 2024
Spring Budget 2024: the Chancellor’s options
Scottish Budget 2024-25: IFS analysis
Policy analysis
Recent trends in public sector pay
26 March 2024
Gap between higher- and lower-paid public sector workers falls by more than a third since 2007 as doctors and experienced teachers have faced unprecedented pay cuts
26 March 2024
Oil and gas make Scotland’s underlying public finances particularly volatile and uncertain
27 March 2024
Academic research
Household responses to trade shocks
26 March 2024
The consequences of miscarriage on parental investments
22 March 2024
The menopause "penalty"
18 March 2024