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How Can Vulnerable Internally Displaced Persons Be Transitioned from HumanitarianAssistance to Social Protection ? Evidence from Iraq

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  • Obi,Chinedu Temple
  • Phadera,Lokendra
  • Wai-Poi,Matthew Grant
  • Leape,Virginia
  • Fox,Gabrielle

Abstract

Aligning the short-term humanitarian assistance system with the government social protectionsystem as a possible long-term solution for the displaced population is well discussed in the literature. However,there is limited evidence on how this alignment is applied in a real-world setting. Using field-test data, this paperdocuments the eligibility of the humanitarian Multi-Purpose Cash Assistance beneficiaries for the government’spoverty-targeted cash transfer program in Iraq. It does so by using two possible approaches —a probabilisticpseudo-proxy-means test, which is based on a limited number of overlapping variables between the targeting models of thehumanitarian and government support systems and is designed to be applied on the existing database, and a new datacollection with complete sets of variables from the targeting models of the two systems. The paper finds that asignificant number of households that qualify for the humanitarian Multi-Purpose Cash Assistance program areeligible for the government’s cash transfer program. While the referral accuracy of the pseudo-proxy-means tests modelis high, it is likely to leave out some eligible households. In additions to identifying the cross-eligibility withcertainty, collecting new data may elicit important insight related to willingness to be referred. The choice betweenelecting to collect new data or relying on thepseudo-proxy-means tests and using existing data comes with important trade-offs and will depend on the capacity,budget, and appetite for the uncertainty of eligibility.

Suggested Citation

  • Obi,Chinedu Temple & Phadera,Lokendra & Wai-Poi,Matthew Grant & Leape,Virginia & Fox,Gabrielle, 2022. "How Can Vulnerable Internally Displaced Persons Be Transitioned from HumanitarianAssistance to Social Protection ? Evidence from Iraq," Policy Research Working Paper Series 10095, The World Bank.
  • Handle: RePEc:wbk:wbrwps:10095
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Beegle, Kathleen & De Weerdt, Joachim & Friedman, Jed & Gibson, John, 2012. "Methods of household consumption measurement through surveys: Experimental results from Tanzania," Journal of Development Economics, Elsevier, vol. 98(1), pages 3-18.
    2. Pritchett, Lant & Suryahadi, Asep & Sumarto, Sudarno, 2000. "Quantifying vulnerability to poverty - a proposed measure, applied to Indonesia," Policy Research Working Paper Series 2437, The World Bank.
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