Samuel Morley and David Coady demonstrate how a promising new
alternative to standard donor-financed education programs--the
conditioned transfer for education (CTE) program--can advance both
poverty reduction and education goals at the same time. CTE programs
meet the immediate needs of the poorest families by providing cash or
food but only on the condition that they keep their children in school.
These transfers reduce poverty in the short run, and the additional
education of the children of poor families breaks the long-run cycle of
poverty by increasing their earning potential.The book compiles a vast
amount of unpublished and published material on existing CTE programs
and their impact on poverty. Groundbreaking case studies and detailed
evaluations of programs in Mexico, Brazil, Bangladesh, Nicaragua,
Honduras, and Chile add up to an unusual and surprising success story
for skeptics of development and foreign aid.