Working Paper: NBER ID: w30049
Authors: Christopher Blattman; Sebastian Chaskel; Julian C. Jamison; Margaret Sheridan
Abstract: Several small, short-term, or non-experimental studies show that cognitive behavioral informed trainings reduce antisocial behaviors for 1–2 years. But there is no large-scale, long-term research on persistence. We follow 999 high-risk men in Liberia 10 years after randomization into: 8 weeks of low-cost therapy, $200 cash, both, or a control group. A decade later, men receiving therapy or therapy with cash were about half as likely as the control group to engage in various antisocial behaviors, including robbery, drug selling, and street fights—far exceeding expert predictions. Impacts are concentrated in the highest-risk men, and most robust from therapy with cash.
Keywords: No keywords provided
JEL Codes: D83; K42; O15; O17
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
therapy (Y60) | reduction in antisocial behaviors (C92) |
therapy with cash (F35) | reduction in antisocial behaviors (C92) |
therapy + cash (I11) | improved self-control (D91) |
improved self-control (D91) | reduction in antisocial behaviors (C92) |
therapy (Y60) | antisocial behaviors (K42) |
cash grants (H81) | behavioral changes instilled by therapy (D91) |