Working paper

Neighborhood Effects in Integrated Social Policies

Matteo Bobba, and Jérémie Gignoux

Abstract

When potential beneficiaries share their knowledge and attitudes about a policy intervention, their decision to participate and the effectiveness of both the policy and its evaluation may be influenced. This matters most notably in integrated social policies with several components. We examine spillover effects on take-up behaviors in the context of a conditional cash transfer program in rural Mexico. We exploit exogenous variations in the local frequency of beneficiaries generated by the program’s randomized evaluation. A higher treatment density in the areas surrounding the evaluation villages increases the take-up of scholarships and enrollment at the lower-secondary level. These cross-village spillovers operate exclusively within households receiving another component of the program, and do not carry over larger distances. While several tests reject heterogeneities in impact due to spatial variations in program implementation, we find evidence to suggest that spillovers stem partly from the sharing of information about the program among eligible households.

Keywords

spatial externalities; knowledge spillovers; peer effects; take-up of social policies; policy evaluation; conditional cash transfers;

JEL codes

  • I2: Education and Research Institutions
  • J2: Demand and Supply of Labor
  • O2: Development Planning and Policy

Replaced by

Matteo Bobba, and Jérémie Gignoux, Neighborhood Effects in Integrated Social Policies, The World Bank Economic Review, vol. 33, n. 1, February 2019, pp. 116–139.

Reference

Matteo Bobba, and Jérémie Gignoux, Neighborhood Effects in Integrated Social Policies, TSE Working Paper, n. 16-662, June 2016, revised August 2016.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 16-662, June 2016, revised August 2016