Food, cash aid help world's poor as prices soar
By Lesley Wroughton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In impoverished Haiti, the government and aid groups hand out lunches at schools in slums. In Brazil, mothers who regularly take their children to medical check-ups qualify for small cash payments.
In Mexico and Bangladesh, governments give millions of poor families cash or wheat and rice for sending their children to school and health clinics.
For more than a decade programs like these have been helping millions of the world's poor by ensuring children are educated and women have access to basic medical care.
Targeted social programs like these have been around for more than a decade but are particularly valuable now when millions of the world's poor are struggling to cope with soaring food and fuel prices.
Some programs, such as the ones in Haiti and Brazil, have been expanded to take into account rocketing prices.
Global development agencies are major supporters of the programs because they can help break the cycle of poverty. The World Bank, for example, approves $1.2 billion annually in loans for cash transfer programs in 12 countries.
Helena Ribe, sector manager for the World Bank's Human Development Network for Latin America, said the programs not only raise incomes for those below the poverty line, but also keep kids in school and help mothers have healthy children.
Ribe said the programs show impressive results not only in Mexico and Brazil, but also in poorer countries such as Honduras and Nicaragua. In Latin America, more than 100 million poor benefit from monthly or annual payments of somewhere between $10 to $70 from their governments. Continued...





