Cash transfer programs have significantly reduced poverty over the years. The World Bank\’s Social Protection and Jobs (SPJ) Unit, in collaboration with ideas42 and the government of Ghana has enhanced these programs with cost-effective behavioral interventions. Supported by the Global Innovation Fund (GIF), ideas42 worked with the World Bank SPJ in Ghana to integrate behavioral designs into Ghana\’s Complementary Livelihood and Asset Support Scheme (CLASS) program, part of the Ghana Productive Safety Net Project. This partnership led to the successful design and testing of behavioral interventions, confirmed by a large-scale randomized evaluation, and secured government support and funding to expand these interventions to all CLASS participants.
In-person, in-depth qualitative interviews with CLASS participants indicated that they had intentions to invest in income generating activities but faced challenges to act (save for productive investment) on that intention. Participants faced many behavioral barriers to consistently save towards productive investments. They included: an identity of poverty (‘I am poor and therefore unable to save’), invisible social norms around savings (saving is an unseen, private activity), present bias (consumption needs today feel more urgent than saving for a better future), and lack of timely reminders to save.
Accordingly, the team designed behavioral interventions to address these barriers and help close the intention-action gap that CLASS participants often faced in starting a sustainable source of livelihood. The suite of behavioral designs included a goal setting and plan-making activity, a savings box with a saving tracker, and a poster reminding participants that small consistent and periodic savings now can lead to big investments later.
The impact of these interventions was tested through a randomized evaluation conducted from December 2022 to January 2023 with 3,109 CLASS participants across 104 communities (52 control and 52 treatment), across four regions in Northern Ghana, and yielded strong, positive results. Participants who received the intervention were 8.3 percentage points more likely to save in the past 12 months, 13.2 percentage points more likely to have a productive goal, and 16 percentage points more likely to know the cost of the goal, compared to the control group that did not receive these interventions. The positive results have made the government implementation team amenable to scale up these interventions, with the potential to benefit all 35,000 CLASS participants across Ghana.
CLASS beneficiaries receiving behavioral change training with their savings boxes. Photo credit: GPSNP Project team.
Reflecting over this partnership, the success can be attributed to three key elements:
We are excited to see the success of these interventions particularly the scale up of behavioral interventions structurally incorporated into the entire Ghana social protection programming. Further, the tools discussed above would be essential to many countries who are deliberating on rolling out similar interventions within their social protection programming. The key is to think of three ‘Ps” for success: ‘partnership’, ‘participation’ and “persistence”.
Source : World Bank Blogs
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