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Are social safety nets and input subsidies reaching the poor in Malawi?

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  • Duchoslav, Jan
  • Kenamu, Edwin

Abstract

Social safety nets are designed to protect vulnerable households and individuals from the impact of economic shocks, natural disasters, and other crises. However, targeting of vulnerable households is difficult and therefore often ineffective. Using data from two rounds of the Integrated Household Survey, this paper provides an overview of the overall coverage of various types of social safety nets and input subsidies in Malawi, and presents an analysis of their coverage of specific types of households with a special focus on poverty, shedding more light on the accuracy of the targeting of these programs. It finds that both the depth and the breadth of coverage of social safety nets increased between 2010/11 and 2016/17, while the coverage of agricultural input subsidies decreased drastically. Transfer programs targeted the poor more heavily than the rich, but still failed to exclusively target only the poorest segments of the population. Input and employment subsidies reached mainly the middle segments of the population in terms of wealth. The ineffectiveness of targeting is likely the result of the complexity of targeting criteria and procedures.

Suggested Citation

  • Duchoslav, Jan & Kenamu, Edwin, 2018. "Are social safety nets and input subsidies reaching the poor in Malawi?," MaSSP working papers 26, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).
  • Handle: RePEc:fpr:masspp:26
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    Cited by:

    1. Duchoslav, Jan & Kenamu, Edwin & Thunde, Jack, 2023. "Targeting hunger or votes? The political economy of humanitarian transfers in Malawi," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 165(C).

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