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Short-Term and Long-Term Effects of Cash for Work: Evidence from a Randomized Controlled Trial in Tunisia

Research co-authored by Eric Mvukiyehe is published in the Journal of Development Studies.

While a growing literature analyzes the economic effects of cash for work programs in developing countries, there remains little evidence about the longer-term effects of these interventions. 

In "Short-Term and Long-Term Effects of Cash for Work: Evidence from a Randomized Controlled Trial in Tunisia," Eric Mvukiyehe, assistant professor of political science and affiliate of the Duke Center for International Development Center, and Jessica Leight, International Food Policy Research Institute, present findings from a randomized controlled trial evaluating a three month intervention providing public works employment in rural Tunisia. 

"The evaluation design incorporates two dimensions of randomization–community-level randomization to treatment and control, and individual-level randomization among eligible individuals–and a sample of 2,718 individuals was tracked over five years," the authors wrote in the paper's abstract. "The findings suggest that cash for work leads to significant increases in labor market engagement, assets, consumption, financial inclusion, psychological well being, and women’s empowerment one-year post-treatment; however, these effects have largely attenuated to zero five years post-treatment, with the exception of a positive effect on assets. There is also evidence of large positive spillover effects within treatment communities, but these effects similarly attenuate over time."

The paper is published in the the Journal of Development Studies.