@misc{17183,
title = {Do Conditional Cash Transfers Lead to Better Secondary Schools?: Evidence from Jamaica's PATH},
author = {Stampini, Marco and Martinez-Cordova, Sofia and Insfran, Sebastian and Harris, Donna Oretha},
year = {2016},
doi = {10.18235/0010663},
abstract = {We explored the hypothesis that the Programme of Advancement through Health and Education (PATH), Jamaica's conditional cash transfer program, contributes to breaking the inter-generational poverty cycle by placing its urban beneficiaries on a higher educational trajectory. Using a regression discontinuity design, we found that PATH urban male beneficiaries who sat the Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) over the period 2010-2014 performed better on the test (scoring 16.03 points, or 3.6%, higher than non-beneficiaries); consequently, they were placed in better secondary schools (1.5 percentiles higher in a national school ranking based on placed students' GSAT scores). In contrast, we found no significant impact for urban girls.},
url = {https://doi.org/10.18235/0010663}
}
