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Adaptive Safety Nets Program 2017-2020, Baseline, Midline and Endline Impact Evaluation Surveys

Niger, 2017 - 2020
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Reference ID
NER_2017-2020_ASPIE_v01_M
DOI
https://doi.org/10.48529/0h1e-xt51
Producer(s)
Patrick Premand
Collection(s)
Development Impact Evaluation (DIME) Fragility, Conflict and Violence
Metadata
Documentation in PDF DDI/XML JSON
Created on
Feb 11, 2022
Last modified
May 05, 2022
Page views
42860
Downloads
1840
  • Study Description
  • Data Description
  • Documentation
  • Get Microdata
  • Identification
  • Version
  • Scope
  • Coverage
  • Producers and sponsors
  • Sampling
  • Survey instrument
  • Data collection
  • Data processing
  • Data Access
  • Disclaimer and copyrights
  • Contacts
  • Metadata production
  • Citation
  • Identification

    Survey ID number

    NER_2017-2020_ASPIE_v01_M

    Title

    Adaptive Safety Nets Program 2017-2020

    Subtitle

    Baseline, Midline and Endline Impact Evaluation Surveys

    Country/Economy
    Name Country code
    Niger NER
    Study type

    Other Household Survey [hh/oth]

    Series Information

    This dataset includes processed variables from the baseline (2017), midline (2019), and endline (2020) surveys for the impact evaluation of productive inclusion measures of the Niger Adaptive Social Protection Program.

    Abstract
    As part of the Adaptive Safety Net Project, the Government of Niger (with support from the World Bank and the Sahel Adaptive Social Protection Program) launched the implementation of productive inclusion measures to foster more productive livelihoods and improve resilience of cash transfer beneficiary households. This dataset covers three rounds of household surveys from the impact evaluation of these productive inclusion measures among cash transfer beneficiary households. It is published along with the related paper: Bossuroy, Thomas; Goldstein, Markus; Karimou, Bassirou; Karlan, Dean; Kazianga, Harounan; Pariente, William; Premand, Patrick; Thomas, Catherine; Udry, Christopher; Vaillant, Julia; Wright, Kelsey. 2022. "Tackling Psychosocial and Capital Constraints Opens Pathways out of Poverty".
    Kind of Data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Unit of Analysis

    Households as well as individuals within households.

    Version

    Version Description
    • v2.1: Edited, anonymous dataset for public distribution.

    Scope

    Notes

    Niger is one of the poorest countries in the world and faces severe development challenges. It is estimated that 44% percent of the population in Niger lives on less than US$1.25 per day, and 75.23% on less than US$2 per day (WDI, 2010). More than 50 percent of Niger’s population is food insecure, with 22 percent of the population suffering from chronic food insecurity in any given year (World Bank, 2011). The Niger safety net project was rolled out in five regions (Dosso, Maradi, Tahoua, Tillabery, and Zinder), within which beneficiary communes and villages were selected.

    Coverage

    Geographic Coverage

    The study focuses on a sub-sample of communes in all five regions chosen for the second phase of the Niger Adaptive Safety Net project (Dosso, Maradi, Tahoua, Tillabery, and Zinder). 17 communes were selected for the study, covering 322 villages across the 5 regions where cash transfer beneficiaries were eligible to receive complementary productive inclusion measures. In each sample village, approximately 14 households (maximum 15) were interviewed at baseline.

    Universe

    Only households that are beneficiaries of the national cash transfer, located in communes and villages mentioned above

    Producers and sponsors

    Primary investigators
    Name Affiliation
    Patrick Premand World Bank
    Funding Agency/Sponsor
    Name Role
    Sahel Adaptive Social Protection Program Funded survey data collection
    WPF Funded survey data collection
    Niger Adaptive Safety Nets Project Provided sampling frame and implemented program
    Other Identifications/Acknowledgments
    Name Affiliation Role
    Sahel Consulting Private Collected baseline data
    Innovations for Poverty Action Supervised baseline and midline data collection

    Sampling

    Sampling Procedure

    Cash transfer beneficiary households were chosen by either proxy means testing, community-based targeting, and a formula to proxy temporary food insecurity (as described in Premand and Schnitzer, 2021). 22,507 cash transfer beneficiary households were later assigned to either a control group or 3 productive inclusion treatment arms (Bossuroy et al., 2022). All three treatment arms include a core package of group savings promotion, coaching, and entrepreneurship training, in addition to the regular cash transfers from the national program. The first variant also includes a lump-sum cash grant (“capital” package). The second variant substitutes the cash grant with psychosocial interventions (“psychosocial” package). The third variant includes the cash grant and the psychosocial interventions (“full” package). The control group only receives the regular cash transfers from the national program. 4,712 households were drawn into a sample for data collection (1206 households in control, 1191 households in capital, 1112 households in psychosocial and 1203 households in full). Before the study, we conducted power calculations assuming an ICC of 0.10 (based on data from Ghana and a Niger national household survey) and equal sized arms. To maximize power, we sampled all villages in this phase. Sampling 15 households per village allowed for minimum detectable sizes of 0.057 SD between arms, before adjusting for baseline outcomes or strata.

    Deviations from the Sample Design

    None

    Response Rate

    The original sample included 4712 households. The baseline, endline, and end-line samples include 4608, 4476, and 4303 households, respectively, and thus completion rates of 97.8%, 95.0%, and 91.3%.

    Weighting

    n/a

    Survey instrument

    Questionnaires

    Household surveys were collected in 3 survey rounds as described above.

    The questionnaires included the following sections:

    I. Beneficiary section
    Roster
    Health
    Beneficiary activity
    Household business
    Time use
    Finance
    Housing
    Food security
    Cash transfers
    Relationships
    Mental health
    Treatment measures
    II. Household head section
    Food consumption
    Head of household activities
    Relationships
    Agriculture
    Livestock and Fish
    Assets
    Education and Health spending
    Non food consumption
    Other programs
    Household transfers
    Shocks

    Questions are generally consistent across rounds.

    The data includes process variables, see attachment for variable definitions and Bossuroy et al. (2022) for details.

    Data collection

    Dates of Data Collection
    Start End Cycle
    2017-04 2017-06 Baseline
    2019-02 2019-03 Midline
    2020-02 2020-03 Endline
    Time periods
    Start date End date Cycle
    2017-04 2017-06 Baseline
    2019-02 2019-03 Midline
    2020-02 2020-03 End-line
    Mode of data collection
    • Face-to-face [f2f]
    Data Collectors
    Name Affiliation
    Sahel Consulting Private
    Supervision

    Data collection was supervised by Innovations for Poverty Action, field coordinators from Sahel Consulting, and the co-authors. The supervision team also worked in collaboration with the safety nets unit. Thorough quality control procedures were put in place, with systematic verifications of questionnaires by enumerators and supervisors. Additional verifications, including household visits, were undertaken by the coordination and quality control teams continuously over the full survey period.

    Data Collection Notes

    Data used in this study was collected using Android tablets and the SurveyCTO Platform developed by Dobility, Inc, versions 2.0 – 2.6.

    Data processing

    Data Editing

    Survey data are labelled, deduplicated and cleaned. It includes constructed variables. The data is documented in three files. A household panel dataset shows data from the baseline, midline, and end-line surveys where observations missing at in the baseline survey are replaced with strata means. Households are observed in two periods. A household-level file shows select variables from the baseline survey. Finally, a food-level file shows median food prices per food unit.

    Variables were constructed according to a pre-analysis plan, registered at https://www.socialscienceregistry.org/versions/52534/docs/version/document, and are further described in Bossuroy, et al (2022).

    Data Access

    Confidentiality
    Is signing of a confidentiality declaration required? Confidentiality declaration text
    yes The data has been anonymized.
    Access conditions
    • Public use files, accessible to all
    Citation requirements

    Bossuroy, Thomas; Goldstein, Markus; Karimou, Bassirou; Karlan, Dean; Kashlan, Yazen; Kazianga, Harounan; Pariente, William; Premand, Patrick; Thomas, Catherine; Udry, Christopher; Vaillant, Julia; Wright, Kelsey. 2022. Adaptive Safety Nets Program 2017-2020, Baseline, Midline and Endline Impact Evaluation Surveys (ASPIE). Ref: NER_2017-2020_ASPIE_v01_M. Dataset downloaded from [url] on [date].

    When citing the data, please make sure to also cite the related paper: Bossuroy, Thomas; Goldstein, Markus; Karimou, Bassirou; Karlan, Dean; Kazianga, Harounan; Pariente, William; Premand, Patrick; Thomas, Catherine; Udry, Christopher; Vaillant, Julia; Wright, Kelsey. 2022. " Tackling psychosocial and capital constraints to alleviate poverty " Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04647-8

    Disclaimer and copyrights

    Disclaimer

    The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.

    Copyright

    (c) 2022, The World Bank

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation Email
    Patrick Premand World Bank ppremand@worldbank.org

    Metadata production

    DDI Document ID

    DDI_NER_2017-2020_ASPIE_v01_M_WB

    Producers
    Name Affiliation Role
    Development Economics Data Group The World Bank Documentation of the DDI
    Date of Metadata Production

    2022-02-11

    Metadata version

    DDI Document version

    Version 01 (February 2022)

    Citation

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