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The Long-Term Impacts of Grants on Poverty: 9-Year Evidence from Uganda’s Youth Opportunities Program
ABSTRACT
In 2008, Uganda granted hundreds of small groups $400/person to help members start individual skilled trades. Four years on, an experimental evaluation found grants raised earnings by 38% (Blattman, Fiala, Martinez 2014). We return after 9 years to find these start-up grants acted more as a kick-start than a lift out of poverty. Grantees' investment leveled off; controls eventually increased their incomes through business and casual labor; and so both groups converged in employment, earnings, and consumption. Grants had lasting impacts on assets, skilled work, and
possibly child health, but had little effect on mortality, fertility, health or education.CITATION
Blattman, Christopher, Nathan Fiala, and Sebastian Martinez. 2019. “The Long-Term Impacts of Grants on Poverty: 9-Year Evidence from Uganda’s Youth Opportunities Program.” NBER Working Papers 24999, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA.