Age Set versus Kin: Culture and Financial Ties in east Africa
Author(s)
Moscona, Jacob; Seck, Awa Ambra
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We study how social organization shapes patterns of economic interaction and the effects of national policy, focusing on the distinction between age-based and kin-based groups in sub-Saharan Africa. Motivated by ethnographic accounts suggesting that this distinction affects redistribution, we analyze a cash transfer program in Kenya and find that in age-based societies there are consumption spillovers within the age cohort, but not the extended family, while in kin-based societies we find the opposite. Next, we document that social structure shapes the impact of policy by showing that Uganda’s pension program had positive effects on child nutrition only in kin-based societies. (JEL H23, I12, I38, J13, O15, Z13).
Date issued
2024-09Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of EconomicsJournal
American Economic Review
Publisher
American Economic Association
Citation
Moscona, Jacob, and Awa Ambra Seck. 2024. "Age Set versus Kin: Culture and Financial Ties in East Africa." American Economic Review 114 (9): 2748–91.
Version: Final published version