Medium- and Long-Term Educational Consequences of Alternative Conditional Cash Transfer Designs: Experimental Evidence from Colombia

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Medium- and Long-Term Educational Consequences of Alternative Conditional Cash Transfer Designs: Experimental Evidence from Colombia
Abstract
In 2005 the city of Bogota, Colombia, introduced three conditional cash transfer programs for secondary schooling, randomly assigning socioeconomically disadvantaged students to different payment structures. We show, through administrative data, that forcing families to save one-third of the transfer increases long-term human capital accumulation by means of additional tertiary education—which is not incentivized—, casting doubt on conditionalities as a driving mechanism. Directly incentivizing on-time tertiary enrollment does no better than forcing families to save a portion of the transfer. Whereas forcing families to save increases enrollment in four-year universities, incentivizing tertiary enrollment only increases enrollment in low-quality colleges.
Publication
American Economic Journal: Applied Economics
Volume
11
Issue
3
Pages
54-91
Date
2019/07
Language
en
ISSN
1945-7782
Short Title
Medium- and Long-Term Educational Consequences of Alternative Conditional Cash Transfer Designs
Accessed
19/03/2021, 16:30
Library Catalogue
Citation
Barrera-Osorio, F., Linden, L. L., & Saavedra, J. E. (2019). Medium- and Long-Term Educational Consequences of Alternative Conditional Cash Transfer Designs: Experimental Evidence from Colombia. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 11(3), 54–91. https://doi.org/10.1257/app.20170008