Evaluating the impact of Egyptian social fund for development programs
The Egyptian Social Fund for Development was established in 1991 with a mandate to reduce poverty. Since its inception, it has disbursed about $2.5 billion, of which nearly two-fifths was devoted to supporting microcredit and financing community development and infrastructure. This paper investigates the size of the impact of the Fund’s interventions, whether the benefits have been commensurate with the costs, and whether the programs have been targeted successfully to the poor. The core of the impact evaluation applies propensity-score matching to data from the 2004/2005 national Household Income, Expenditure and Consumption Survey. The authors find that Egypt’s Social Fund for Development programs have had clear and measurable effects, in the expected direction, for all of the programs considered: educational interventions have reduced illiteracy, health and potable water programs have lowered household spending on health, sanitation interventions have cut household spending on sanitation and lowered poverty, and road projects have reduced household transportation costs by 20 percent. Microcredit is associated with higher household expenditures in metropolitan areas and urban Upper Egypt, but not elsewhere. The Social Fund for Development’s road projects generate benefits that, by some estimates, exceed the costs, as do health and potable water interventions; this is less evident for interventions in education and sanitation. The Fund argues that its mission is primarily social, and so should not be judged using a cost-benefit analysis. The Fund support for microcredit is strongly pro-poor; the other programs analyzed have a more modest pro-poor orientation.
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- Hala Abou-Ali & Hesham El-Azony & Heba El-Laithy & Jonathan Haughton & Shahid Khandker, 2010. " Evaluating the impact of Egyptian Social Fund for Development programmes ," Journal of Development Effectiveness, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 2(4), pages 521-555.
References listed on IDEAS
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Citations
Elikplimi K. Agbloyor & Simplice A. Asongu & Peter Muriu, 2021. " Sustainability, Growth and Impact of MFIs in Africa ," Working Papers of the African Governance and Development Institute. 21/083, African Governance and Development Institute..
- Elikplimi K. Agbloyor & Simplice A. Asongu & Peter Muriu, 2021. " Sustainability, Growth and Impact of MFIs in Africa ," Research Africa Network Working Papers 21/083, Research Africa Network (RAN).
- Elikplimi K. Agbloyor & Simplice A. Asongu & Peter Muriu, 2021. " Sustainability, Growth and Impact of MFIs in Africa ," Working Papers 21/083, European Xtramile Centre of African Studies (EXCAS).
- Agbloyor, Elikplimi & Asongu, Simplice & Muriu, Peter, 2021. " Sustainability, Growth and Impact of MFIs in Africa ," MPRA Paper 111752, University Library of Munich, Germany.
- Duvendack, Maren & Palmer-Jones, Richard, 2011. " High Noon for Microfinance Impact Evaluations: Re-investigating the Evidence from Bangladesh ," MPRA Paper 27902, University Library of Munich, Germany.
- Caroline Krafft, 2016. " Why is Fertility on the Rise in Egypt? The Role of Women’s Employment Opportunities ," Working Papers 1050, Economic Research Forum, revised 09 Jan 2016.
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Keywords
NEP fields
- NEP-ARA-2009-07-28 (MENA - Middle East and North Africa)
- NEP-CWA-2009-07-28 (Central and Western Asia)
- NEP-MFD-2009-07-28 (Microfinance)
- NEP-PPM-2009-07-28 (Project, Program and Portfolio Management)
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