Cash transfers during urban crises: lessons for women’s economic empowerment

IIED Briefing
, 4 pages
PDF (257.02 KB)
17426IIED.pdf
Language:
English
Published: July 2017
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IIED Briefing Papers

Cash transfers are increasingly used in urban humanitarian crises. They can stimulate markets and let people choose the help they actually need. But they can also influence gender equality and women’s economic empowerment — for good or, potentially, for bad. This briefing reports research in Nepal that examined government and international aid grants distributed after the 2015 earthquake. Cash transfers did not directly empower women, but did shift gender dynamics, for example making men and women more likely to discuss household expenditures. Cash for work programmes also gave women control over spending decisions. All cash transfer programmes should consider gender equality and women’s economic empowerment in their design and implementation, and this briefing offers practical recommendations for government, aid agencies and practitioners.

Cite this publication

Nesbitt-Ahmed, Z. (2017). Cash transfers during urban crises: lessons for women’s economic empowerment. IIED, London.
Available at https://www.iied.org/17426iied