Impact of Cash Transfers on Poverty Reduction towards Achieving Sustainable Development Goals among Female-Headed Households in Siaya County, Kenya.
Publication Date
2023Author
Nyongesa, Destaings
Odhiambo, Scholastica
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
Poverty rate is still high among developing economies; 8 years post adoption of the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs) agenda of 2030. Cash transfers have popularly become one of the ways to support
implementation of SDGs. This study focused on the Inua Jamii-CT programme whose principal objective
was to establish the impact of cash transfer on poverty reduction towards achieving SDGs among femaleheaded households in Siaya County. The study was founded on the Household Welfare Theory where
household welfare is best measured in terms of income and consumption decisions of the household. The
study targeted the 109,680 female-headed households in Siaya County. The Yamane formula arrived at a
sample of 399 households. A correlational design was adopted and 377 respondents realized. An analysis of
descriptive statistics of respondent household demographics revealed that 214 of the households receive cash
transfers against 163 who don’t. The average household expenditure was on food and farm inputs. The
female-head was averagely 49 years old, 52.2% were of good health and 85.7% had reached only primary
level of education. The household had a mean of 5 members. 51.7% of the female-heads belonged to a social
group. 41.4% of the female-head earned their income from farming and 36.3% from small businesses. A
binary logit regression model determined that cash transfer, income, household consumption were significant
predictors of SDGs among FHHs in Siaya County with P values of less than 0.05. The R2
of 0.3 showed a
30% goodness of fit for the model. The coefficients of cash transfer and income are β1=-0.935 and β2=- 0.689
respectively, hence, increasing cash transfers and income reduces poverty. There was a negligible
relationship between household consumption and SDGs β3=0.0004. Conclusion was drawn that CT was
significant in the achievement of the SDGs. The study recommends a targeted programme design to ensure
more income generating activities and good farming practices.
Collections
- Department of Economics [104]