KEN_2010_HSNP-FU1_v01_M
Hunger Safety Net Programme Impact Evaluation 2010-2011
First Follow-up Round
Name | Country code |
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Kenya | KEN |
Impact Evaluation
The Hunger Safety Net Programme (HSNP) is a social protection project being conducted in the Arid and Semi-Arid Lands (ASALs) of northern Kenya. The pilot phase has now concluded and the HSNP is beginning to scale up under Phase 2. The ASALs are extremely food-insecure areas highly prone to drought, which have experienced recurrent food crises and food aid responses for decades. The HSNP is intended to reduce dependency on emergency food aid by sustainably strengthening livelihoods through cash transfers.
Oxford Policy Management was responsible for the monitoring and evaluation (M&E) of the programme under the pilot phase, with the intention of informing programme scale-up as well as the government’s social protection strategy more generally. The M&E involved a large-scale rigorous community-randomised controlled impact evaluation household survey, assessment of targeting performance of three alternative targeting mechanisms (Social Pension; Dependency Ratio; Community-based Targeting), qualitative research (interviews and focus group discussions) to assess targeting and impact issues less easily captured in the quantitative survey, and on-going operational and payments monitoring to ensure the smooth implementation of the programme. Findings were communicated to the HSNP Secretariat, Government of Kenya and the Department for International Development (DFID) on a regular basis to inform and advise on policy revisions and development. The M&E component used the data it produced to advise the design of HSNP Phase 2, including micro-simulations of different programme targeting scenarios and review of the phase 2 targeting approach which combines proxy means testing with community-based targeting.
The impact evaluation study compares the situation of HSNP and control households at the time of their selection into the programme (baseline), with their situation 12 months (year 1 follow-up) and 24 months later (year 2 follow-up). Over this 24-month period most of the HSNP households covered by the evaluation had received 11 or 12 bi-monthly transfers (initially KES 2,150, increased to KES 3,500 by the end of the evaluation period).
Fieldwork for the first follow-up survey was conducted in 48 sub-locations, stratified by greater district (Mandera, Marsabit, Turkana, Wajir), by HSNP status (treatment and control), and by targeting mechanism (Social Pension; Dependency Ratio; Community-based Targeting). The survey covered 4,637 households and 245 communities.
The baseline data collection was completed in November 2010, the first round of follow-up data collection finished in November 2011, and the final round of fieldwork - in November 2012.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Version 01
The scope of the study includes:
Counties of Turkana, Marsabit, Wajir, and Mandera.
All persons living within "secure" sub-locations across all counties at the time of sampling (2008; due to sporadic insecurity across the four counties, a small portion of sub-locations were deemed to be insecure when the sample was drawn and so excluded from the sample frame).
Name |
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Oxford Policy Management Limited |
Name | Role |
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Institute for Development Studies | Consortium member HSNP M&E component |
Research Solutions |
Name | Role |
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Department for International Development | Programme and Evaluation Funder |
The first follow-up round covered 4,637 households. The sample size at the first follow-up was smaller than at baseline due to sample attrition.
The evaluation sub-locations were selected from a sample frame of all secure sub-locations in each district. In each district 12 sub-locations were selected with PPS (Probability Proportional to Size) with implicit stratification by population density such that there is an even number of selected sub-locations per new district.
The evaluation sub-locations were sorted within districts by population density and paired up, with one of the pair being control and one being treatment.
The sampling strategy for the quantitative survey was designed in order to enable a comparison of the relative targeting performance of three different targeting mechanisms. These are:
For both the treatment and control sub-locations there are an equal number of CBT, SP and DR sub-locations. Assignment of targeting mechanisms to sub-locations was done randomly across the same pairs that were defined to assign treatment and control status.
In all the evaluation sub-locations, the HSNP Admin component implemented the targeting process. In half the sub-locations the selected recipients started receiving the transfer as soon as they were enrolled on the programme - these are referred to as the treatment sub-locations. In the other half of the evaluation sub-locations, the selected recipients were not to receive the transfer for the first two years after enrolment - these are referred to as the control sub-locations.
The households in the treatment sub-locations that are selected for the programme are referred to as the treatment group. These households are beneficiaries of the programme. In control sub-locations the households that are selected for the programme are referred to as the control group. These households are also beneficiaries of the programme but only begin to receive payments two years after registration. The targeting process was identical in the treatment and control sub-locations.
The following population groups can thus be identified and sampled:
Because targeting was conducted in both treatment and control areas, households were sampled in the same way across treatment and control areas. Selected households (groups A and B) were sampled from HSNP administrative records. Sixty six beneficiary households were sampled using simple random sampling (SRS) in each sub-location (in two of sub-locations this was not possible due to insufficient numbers of beneficiaries in the programme records). In cases of household non-response replacements were randomly drawn from the remaining list of non-sampled households. This process was strictly controlled by the District Team Leaders.
Non-selected households (groups C and D) were sampled from household listings undertaken in a sample of three settlements within each sub-location. These settlements were randomly sampled. The settlement sample was stratified by settlement type, with one settlement of each type being sampled. Settlements were stratified into three different types:
As concern community level data, community questionnaires were conducted in every community for which at least one household interview was attached. A community was defined as a settlement or a sub-section of a settlement if that settlement had been segmented due to its size. Due to missing data, a small proportion of households are not linked to any community data.
The above explanation is taken from "Kenya HSNP Monitoring and Evaluation Component: Impact Evaluation Final Report 2009 to 2012". For more details please refer to this report in Related Materials section.
Two versions of the sampling weight are provided:
For non-selected households, the weights are given by:wijk = 1 / [ (aijk/Aijk) (1/bij)(1/cij) ], where where:
Community-level variables can be weighted using community weights (cmq_wt), which equal the sum of household weights across the households lnked to that community.
The above explanation is taken from "Kenya HSNP Monitoring and Evaluation Component: Impact Evaluation Final Report 2009 to 2012". For more details please refer to this report in Related Materials section.
Start | End |
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2010-11 | 2011-11 |
This is the Baseline component of a panel survey and it was conducted between August 2009 to November 2010.
The use of the datasets must be acknowledged using a citation which would include:
Example:
Oxford Policy Management Limited. Kenya Hunger Safety Net Programme Impact Evaluation 2010-2011, First Follow-up Round. Ref. KEN_2010_HSNP-FU1_v01_M. Dataset downloaded from [URL] on [date].
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.
Name | Affiliation | |
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Marta Marzi | Oxford Policy Management Limited | marta.marzi@opml.co.uk |
Fred Merttens | Oxford Policy Management Limited | fred.merttens@opml.co.uk |
DDI_KEN_2010_HSNP-FU1_v01_M
Name | Affiliation |
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Development Data Group | World Bank |
Oxford Policy Management Limited |
2014-01-07
v01 (January 2014)