Project Draft Paper

Money Matters: The Impact of Cash Transfers on Syrian Refugee Children in Lebanon

Date

October, 2020

This paper evaluates the impact of multi-purpose cash assistance on Syrian refugee children living in Lebanon. Using a sharp multidimensional regression discontinuity design, we estimate the program impact of varying cash assistance durations measured over two waves of household survey data collected in 2019. The novel research design enables us to make pairwise comparisons between children from discontinued recipient households (received cash for 12 months then got discontinued in the next cash cycle), short-run cash recipient households (12 months or less), long-run recipient households (more than 12 months) and non-beneficiary eligible households. Results show that children of any MPC recipient group are transitioning from non-formal to formal schooling while also shifting away from child labor. Cash transfers improve health outcomes for pre-primary and school-aged children and reduce the likelihood of early marriage for girls aged 15-19 years.
Money Matters: The Impact of Cash Transfers on Syrian Refugee Children in Lebanon

Authors

Wael Moussa

Research Scientist, Education Policy and Data Center/Research...

Money Matters: The Impact of Cash Transfers on Syrian Refugee Children in Lebanon

Authors

Alexandra Irani

Project Research Manager, Applied Economics and Development...

Money Matters: The Impact of Cash Transfers on Syrian Refugee Children in Lebanon

Research Fellows

Nisreen Salti

Associate Professor, Department of Economics, American University...

Money Matters: The Impact of Cash Transfers on Syrian Refugee Children in Lebanon

Authors

Rima Al-Mokdad

Research Assistant, Department of Agriculture, Faculty of...

Money Matters: The Impact of Cash Transfers on Syrian Refugee Children in Lebanon

Authors

Zeina Jamaluddine

Center for Research on Population and Health,...

Money Matters: The Impact of Cash Transfers on Syrian Refugee Children in Lebanon

Research Fellows

Jad Chaaban

Associate Professor of Economics, Doha Institute for...

Money Matters: The Impact of Cash Transfers on Syrian Refugee Children in Lebanon

Authors

Hala Ghattas

Associate Research Professor, American University of Beirut