Grant Miller, Professor of Medicine, Stanford University, presents, “Anti-Poverty Programs, Human Trafficking, and Child Labor: Evidence from Brazil’s Bolsa Familia Program”

Grant Miller, Professor of Medicine, Stanford University, presents, “Anti-Poverty Programs, Human Trafficking, and Child Labor: Evidence from Brazil’s Bolsa Familia Program”

Coercive labor (adult labor trafficking and child labor) is astonishingly prevalent worldwide.  Poverty creates vulnerability to labor coercion, but quantitative evidence on how anti-poverty programs mitigate this vulnerability is scarce – particularly for adult labor trafficking. This paper provides new evidence on how conditional cash transfer programs, cornerstones of anti-poverty policy in lower-income countries, influence coercive labor risk, focusing on Brazil’s Bolsa Familia program.  Using multiple regression discontinuity designs, we find evidence of limited effects on adult labor trafficking risk.  By contrast, we also find that the program does substantially reduce child labor among the poor – but not among those classified as living in extreme poverty.  Our results suggest that for adults, income gains alone may be insufficient to reduce labor trafficking risk -- and complementary action against criminal recruiters may be simultaneously required.

 

 

 

Event Date
-
Venue
Room 270 Gross Hall/ SSRI
Event Type