Le Laboratoire d'Action contre la Pauvreté, J-PAL, est un centre de recherche mondial qui œuvre à la réduction de la pauvreté en veillant à ce que les politiques sociales s'appuient sur des preuves scientifiques. S'appuyant sur un réseau de plus de 1,000 chercheurs affiliés dans des universités du monde entier, J-PAL mène des évaluations d'impact randomisées afin de répondre aux questions essentielles dans la lutte contre la pauvreté.
Le Laboratoire d'Action contre la Pauvreté, J-PAL, est un centre de recherche mondial qui œuvre à la réduction de la pauvreté en veillant à ce que les politiques sociales s'appuient sur des preuves scientifiques. S'appuyant sur un réseau de plus de 1,000 chercheurs affiliés dans des universités du monde entier, J-PAL mène des évaluations d'impact randomisées afin de répondre aux questions essentielles dans la lutte contre la pauvreté.
Nos chercheurs affiliés sont basés dans plus de 120 universités et effectuent des évaluations aléatoires dans le monde entier pour concevoir, évaluer et améliorer les programmes et les politiques qui visent à réduire la pauvreté. Ils définissent leurs propres agendas de recherche, collectent des fonds pour mener leurs évaluations et travaillent avec les équipes de J-PAL sur la recherche, la diffusion des résultats et la formation.
Our research, policy, and training work is fundamentally better when it is informed by a broad range of perspectives.
Many farmers in developing countries lack the capital necessary to invest in potentially profitable inputs, as these investments must be made months after the harvest when households lack cash. Commitment savings accounts, which have features to discourage withdrawals, have been shown to help the poor save, and could help farmers put aside money to invest in their farms. However, demand for these products is low. In an ongoing study, researchers are aiming to identify product features that increase demand for commitment savings accounts and evaluate the effect of the accounts on farm investments and yields.
Many farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa lack the capital necessary to invest in potentially profitable inputs, as these investments must be made months after the harvest when households lack cash. Saving may also be particularly hard due to demands from family and friends. Commitment savings accounts, which have features to discourage withdrawals, have been shown to help the poor save, and could help farmers put aside money to invest in their farms. However, demand for these products is low, and it remains unclear what causes individuals to save more. Savings products that allow customers to withdrawal money in the case of emergencies could make the accounts more popular, help more farmers invest in their farms, and in turn, increase farm profitability. To shed light on these questions, researchers are investigating how various product features impact demand for commitment savings products, and the how the saving accounts impact farm investment and yields.
The majority of Rwandan farmers participate in two planting seasons. Farmers generally face a tight planting calendar, with harvest and planting times for the two main crop seasons nearly overlapping: Season A ends in January/February and Season B starts in February. Many Season A crops (such as beans) require drying or other post-harvest processing before farmers can market and sell the crops. As a result, farmers rarely have income from Season A by the time they need to buy inputs for Season B. Many farmers in the region either use credit or reduce input use to deal with this shortfall.
Researchers are partnering with Rwanda’s Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Resources (MINAGRI) and local Savings and Credit Cooperatives (SACCOs) to evaluate the impact of input saving accounts on investment and yields. The commitment savings products are designed to allow farmers to exert self-control and save a portion of their season B income for the following seasons A and B. Researchers are working with 1,101 farmers from four cooperatives to determine whether pairing insurance with savings increases take-up or changes savings behavior. Farmers were randomly assigned to one of six groups:
Standard Commitment Savings Account (196 farmers): Farmers were offered an account that allows free withdrawals in only two periods corresponding to the planting seasons. All other withdrawals incur a withdrawal penalty.
Commitment Savings Account with Health Exemption (231 farmers): Farmers were offered the standard commitment savings account, with no withdrawal penalty if the account holder provides documentation of an adverse health event.
Commitment Savings Account with Agricultural Exemption (230 farmers): Farmers were offered the standard commitment saving account, with no withdrawal penalty if the local agronomist verified an adverse agricultural event.
Commitment Savings Account with Private Exemptions (217 farmers): Farmers were offered the standard commitment savings account, but individuals were privately informed that they were exempt from all withdrawal fees.
Comparison group (227 farmers): Farmers were offered financial literacy training and the opportunity to register for a standard savings account, but not a commitment savings account.
In addition, researchers are privately announcing to half of the farmers who register for a commitment savings account that they will be exempt from all withdrawal fees on the account—i.e. the account will in practice function like a standard savings account, but is labeled as a commitment savings account. By privately announcing that the commitment account will function like a standard account, researchers can identify whether the commitment creates a mechanism for shielding money from others or from one’s own impulses.
Study ongoing, results forthcoming.