Conditional cash transfer (CCT) programmes have worked fairly well in large upper middle-income countries such as Brazil and Mexico. But this does not mean that the CCT model can be exported to all countries, especially the poorest. As the table shows, programmes in low-income countries are reaching a much smaller share of their population and of the extremely poor. The number of beneficiaries of CCT programmes in Brazil and Mexico is larger than the number of the extremely poor, whereas in Nicaragua the beneficiaries are equivalent to 7.8 per cent of the extremely poor population. Low-income countries also have a much more limited capacity to spend on these programmes. For instance, Mexico invests 0.44 per cent of its GDP and 4.3 per cent of total social spending in CCTs, while Honduras invests 0.02 per cent of GDP and 0.2 per cent of social spending. (...)
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Publisher Info
Paper provided by International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth in its series One Pager with number
90.
Length: 1 Date of creation: Jul 2009 Date of revision: Publication status: Published by UNDP - International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth , July 2009, pages 1-1 Handle: RePEc:ipc:opager:90