Skip Navigation

New Technologies: ICTs

Key Documents

Background reading

Displaying 1-2 of 2 key documents

Zap It to Me: The Short-Term Impacts of a Mobile Cash Transfer Program

Source: Center for Global Development | September 2011

This report presents findings from the first randomised evaluation of a cash transfer programme delivered using mobile phones. The study investigated the effect of mobile phone technology on monthly cash transfers to households in Niger that were affected by a severe drought.  

Villages that received cash in this way, known as 'zap', saw benefits such as reduced costs of receiving cash, more diverse purchases and diets, and more types of crops. This, suggest the authors, is down to the zap mechanism encouraging different decision-making in the household, as well as due to lower costs and greater privacy.

They conclude that mobile transfers are a cost-effective way of transferring cash to remote rural populations, especially those with limited road and financial infrastructure, but caution that more research is needed on broader effects on the welfare of these populations.

Bridging the digital divide

Source: International Development Research Centre

This multimedia collection looks at how information and communication technologies can improve the lives of people in developing countries by increasing productivity, building relationships and reducing poverty. Reports include how mobile phones are improving agriculture in Kenya, the Internet in Mongolia and an overview of the poison centre network that provides information on antidotes to poison centres around the world.