Authors
Gustavo Angeles, Jacobus de Hoop, Sudhanshu Handa, Kelly Kilburn, Annamaria Milazzo, Amber Peterman, Malawi Social Cash Transfer Evaluation Team
Publication date
2019/3/1
Journal
Social Science & Medicine
Volume
225
Pages
108-119
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
We explore the impacts of Malawi's national unconditional cash transfer program targeting ultra-poor households on youth mental health. Experimental findings show that the program significantly improved mental health outcomes. Among girls in particular, the program reduces indications of depression by about 15 percentage points. We investigate the contribution of different possible pathways to the overall program impact, including education, health, consumption, caregiver's stress levels and life satisfaction, perceived social support, and participation in hard and unpleasant work. The pathways explain from 46 to 65 percent of the program impact, advancing our understanding of how economic interventions can affect mental health of youth in resource-poor settings. The findings underline that unconditional cash grants, which are used on an increasingly large scale as part of national social protection systems in …
Total citations
2018201920202021202220232024132130281312
Scholar articles
G Angeles, J de Hoop, S Handa, K Kilburn, A Milazzo… - Social Science & Medicine, 2019