SEWA, “Unconditional cash transfers: SEWA pilots a unique experiment in Madhya Pradesh”

The Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) recently completed a large pilot project on Basic Income in India. The association’s June Newsletter reports on the methodology and findings of the study.

The project randomly assigned 8 out of 20 villages in the study to receive the grant, while the other 12 villages were used as controls. Every adult man and woman in the treatment villages received a grant of 200 Rupees (about US$3 or N$30) per month and every child received 100 Rupees per month. After one year, the amounts were increased to 300 Rupees and 150 Rupees respectively. A total of 6,000 individuals in the 8 villages received the grants for 12 to 17 months. The amount was equivalent to about 20 to 30 percent of household income for the lower-income families in the study.

Researchers conducting the study found that the grants significantly reduced hunger, malnutrition, and illness among recipients. Recipients increased ownership of livestock, reduced, improved school attendance, improved school attendance, and increased investment in agricultural implements. Researchers found no increase in alcohol consumption in the treatment villages. Importantly, the study also found that grant recipients worked more than people in the control villages and that they were three times more likely to start a new business. These results for a positive effect on work effort and earned income (found both the Uganda and the India studies) are confirmed by evidence from cash transfer programs. For example, in South Africa, the Old Age Pension, the Child Support Grant, and the Disability Grant all helped to raise labor force participation and employment.

SEWA, “Unconditional cash transfers: SEWA pilots a unique experiment in Madhya Pradesh,” We the Self-Employed: SEWA’s Electronic Newsletter, No. 50, June 2013.

No. 50, June 2013

No. 50, June 2013

Baron, Alexander. “Op-Ed: Basic Income for Europe in 2014?”

Aynur Bashirova – BI News – 2013.

Alexander Baron - the Digital Journal

Alexander Baron - the Digital Journal

Alexander Baron, in an article published in the Digital Journal, argues that today’s governments’ wage policies are not functional, will not get countries out of the economic crisis, and do not benefit people. People working in unskilled jobs, such as at McDonalds’, are paid so little that they cannot become a breadwinner. If Basic Income (BI) is not introduced in Europe, the poor will become even more desperate and highly paid professionals will stay crippled because of high taxes. On top of that, those who cannot find well paid jobs enter into crime. Introduction of BI will help with the economic crisis, people’s salaries, and lowering the crime rates.

Baron, Alexander. (7 August 2013). “Op-Ed: Basic Income for Europe in 2014?” Digital Journal. https://www.digitaljournal.com/article/354625.

Belgium: Flemish green party supports basic pension for all

The Flemish green party Groen! has recently suggested the implementation of a basic pension for all in Belgium. According to green MP Wouter De Vriendt (5 August 2013), the amount of such a basic income for the old should be fixed at 1000EUR per month. On top of it, individuals could add a “work bonus” depending on their past work record.

For further information, see the press release of MP Wouter De Vriendt (in Dutch)

The NewsFlash and BI News request volunteers

The Basic Income News and its accompanying NewsFlashes are entirely written, edited, and maintained by volunteers. We need help from volunteers. We need people to write articles, to translate articles, and to help improve the appearance of website and the email newsletter. If you’re interested in helping, please contact the editor, Karl Widerquist <karl@widerquist.com>.

INDIA: Basic Income Pilot Project releases an impressive list of findings.

Several NGOs in India have conducted a pilot project on basic income over the last two years. At a conference this May, the researchers released an impressive list of findings below. (Acronyms used below: IES, Interim Evaluation Survey; FES, Final Evaluation Survey; MPUCT, Madhya Pradesh Unconditional Cash Transfer pilot; TVUCT, Tribal Village Unconditional Cash Transfer pilot)

Implementation and Financial Inclusion

  • Take-up of the basic income grants was rapid, with 93% receiving them in the first month in cash form.
  • Bank account opening was challenging work for SEWA officials, but within a few months almost everybody had had bank or cooperative accounts.
  • However, a majority of the villagers reported in the IES and FES that they had experienced no major problems opening bank accounts.
  • Women found it easier to access and operate SEWA Co-operative accounts than the Nationalised Bank Accounts.
  • The project has led to financial inclusion: Savings increased and households began using their accounts for saving, rather than keeping money at home.

Housing and sanitation

  • Recipients of basic income grants were significantly more likely to make improvements to their dwellings.
  • The main improvements were to walls and roofs, although improvement to latrines was also widespread.
  • The basic income grants led to a switch to more preferred sources of energy for cooking.
  • In the tribal village, cash grants were used by the recipients to construct new dwellings (10%), repair old houses, switch to better drinking water sources, such as getting own tube-well, and shift to better lighting.

Nutrition and Diet

  • Using the WHO’s z-score index, income grants were associated with an improvement in children’s weight-for-age, with the main effect being among young girls.
  • Cash grant recipients were significantly more likely than others to have enough income for their daily food needs.
  • Cash grants led to more varied diets, with greater relative consumption of fruit and vegetables, rather than simple reliance on subsidised staples.
  • In the tribal villages, cash grant recipients reported a sharp rise in food sufficiency. In the cash transfer village, households that reported that their income was sufficient for their food needs increased from about 50% in the baseline to 78% in the IES, and further to 82% in the FES. Correspondingly, the incidence of having insufficient food fell.
  • In the MPUCT, an increase in food sufficiency was most pronounced for scheduled caste households.
  • Those receiving cash grants were not more likely than others to increase spending on “private bads”, such as alcohol or tobacco. Reasons for that will be presented in the conference.

Health and healthcare

  • During the course of the pilots, cash grant households reported a lower incidence of common illnesses.
  • Cash grants led to more regular medical treatment and more regular taking of medicines. This was particularly observable in the TVUCT.
  • Cash grants were associated with increased spending on medical treatment.
  • Improved health was attributed most to an increased ability to afford medicines, although many families also mentioned it was due to more or better food and reduced anxiety. Scheduled Tribe households were relatively likely to attribute better health to the acquisition of more or better food.
  • The public health system has achieved impressively high levels of immunization.
  • Cash grants were associated with more resort to private healthcare, and in particular a shift from government hospitals to private hospitals.
  • Although the number acquiring health insurance was small, significantly more cash grant households did so during the course of the experiments.

Impact on the Disabled

  • Cash grants benefited those with disabilities even more than others, by enabling them to have more access to food and to medical assistance.
  • Individualised cash grants gave household members with disabilities greater voice in how money was spent.
  • Case studies showed that the cash grants enabled some disabled to become economically active, overcoming constraints to their full membership in village society.

Schooling

  • Cash grants were associated with improvement in school enrolment. Although initially there was no significant difference in enrolment, by the FES the enrolment rates of children from 4 to 18 years was 12% higher in the cash transfer villages.
  • Transfers led to increased spending on essentials for school, including stationery, shoes, uniforms and basic equipment.
  • Cash grants were associated with more regular school attendance, with 29% of cash transfer households reporting an improvement, compared with 13% in control villages.
  • Income Grants were associated with improved school performance. Grades over time taken from actual registers of schools showed that more children from cash transfer families were doing better than children of non-grant families. Scheduled-tribe households were the most likely to show an improvement in performance in terms of grades.
  • By the end of the pilots, households in cash grant villages were more likely to be sending their children to private schools. Almost half of all cash-grant village children were enrolled in private school, compared with 30% in control villages.
  • Cash transfers were associated with families spending more on transport to school. Grant-receiving households were more likely to send their children to schools located at a greater distance from their homes, and so spent more on transport.
  • In the period covered, cash transfers were associated with an increase in private tuition. Most social categories in cash transfer villages spent more on private tuition than in other villages, except scheduled-caste families.
  • Cash grants helped families to ensure that their children did non-school work that was less disruptive to their schooling. This was particularly observed in the tribal village.

Economic activity, work and production

  • Contrary to a common criticism of cash transfers, cash grants were associated with an increase in labour and work.
  • Cash grant households were twice as likely to have increased their production work as non-transfer households.
  • Cash grants led to an increase in own-account work, and a relative switch from wage labour to own-account farming and small-scale business. This was especially true for scheduled caste households and for women workers.
  • The shift from labour to own farm work was especially marked in the tribal villages.
  • Many families used cash grants to buy small items for production, such as sewing machines and seeds and fertiliser.
  • Cash grants were associated with the purchase of more livestock to increase production. Households in the cash-grant tribal village increased their livestock by 70%.
  • Cash grant households more likely to increase their income from work, in spite of it being a difficult year due to weather conditions in the area.
  • Cash grant households were three times as likely to start a new business or production activity (be it with help from firms like https://www.yourcompanyformations.co.uk/ or otherwise) as others, with a majority attributing that to the cash grants.
  • In tribal village, farmers have increased their spending in good quality seeds, fertilisers and pesticides.

Debt and Savings

  • Severe indebtedness was found in over three-quarters of all households.
  • Cash grants were associated with a significant reduction in indebtedness, both because recipients used the money to reduce existing debt and because they used the money to avoid going into further debt. Those receiving cash grants were more than twice as likely to reduce debt.
  • Cash grants led to a significant increase in savings, even in households with debt. Households often used the money to give themselves vital liquidity.
  • People who looked to things like Equity Experts Debt Collector plans found that they got out of debt quicker and more effciently.

Policy Implications

  • Only a minority of low-income households in all 20 of the villages had a BPL (Below Poverty Line) or Antyodaya Card. Some of the poorest households had no poverty card at all.
  • Only a minority (14%) of households in the 20 villages had ever participated in MGNREGS, the government scheme supposedly guaranteeing every rural household 100 days of employment.

For more on the India Pilot projects see the following articles:
Seetha, “Bite this: Survey proves cash transfer critics wrong,” FirstPost: Economy, May 31, 2013
Standing, Guy, “The poor are responsible too,” the Financial Express, June 6, 2013
Fernandez, Benjamin, “Rupees in your pocket,” The Morung Express, 2013
Guy Standing, “Can Basic Income Cash Transfers Transform India?BI News, May 28, 2013