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Final Evaluation Report: Enhancing the Productive Capacity of Extremely Poor People in Rwanda
ABSTRACT
Since 2011 Concern Worldwide-Rwanda and Services au Développement des
Associations (SDA-IRIBA) with financial support from Irish Aid, have implemented a project called ‘Enhancing the Productive Capacity of Extremely Poor People’, also
known as the ‘Graduation Programme’, in the Southern Province of Rwanda. The
programme targets extremely poor households – defined as those who are unable tomeet their basic needs for food, health care, shelter, and education. The programme delivers a package of support that includes cash transfers to meet basic needs – averaging RwF.18,000 (about €22) per household per month – skills development and resources to improve livelihoods, and improved savings to increase resilience to shocks. In addition, intensive coaching is provided by volunteer Community Development Animators (CDAs) who each visit approximately 15 beneficiaries twice
every month. This package is similar but not identical to the support delivered by
‘graduation model’ programmes in Bangladesh and several other countries, and itshares the same objective of enabling sustainable exits from extreme poverty. By the end of the project cycle, beneficiaries are expected to have ‘graduated’ into self-reliant livelihoods. This final report aims to identify trends in participants’ human, social and financial
wellbeing over time, to quantify any changes that are attributable to the Graduation Programme, and to identify factors that either enable or constrain sustained improvements in key outcome indicators. Specifically, the evaluation tested several
hypotheses around a set of indicators that were monitored before, during and after the programme was implemented. Participants were expected to increase their asset ownership, food security, spending on basic needs, savings, ability to borrow and
repay loans, investment in education, investment in health and preventative health care, hygiene practices, empowerment over household decision-making, and
engagement in social activities and community institutions, in comparison to controlgroup households. Participating households were also expected to diversify their
income sources, and to reduce their levels of deprivation and adoption of damaging
coping strategies, thanks to their participation in the Graduation Programme.CITATION
Devereux, Stephen, and Ricardo Sabates. 2016. Final Evaluation Report: Enhancing
the Productive Capacity of Extremely Poor People in Rwanda. Dublin: Concern
Worldwide and IDS.