Humanitarian Cash Transfers Provide Lifeline to Vulnerable Families

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From Ukraine to Yemen, Bangladesh to Kenya to Afghanistan, one of the ways UNICEF helps families in need is through humanitarian cash transfers.

Through the program, families impacted by conflict, flooding, drought and other emergencies receive a cash stipend to cover the cost of food, clothing, school supplies, health care and other essentials. 

The approach is an increasingly popular one in emergency settings where goods and services are to some extent available, yet crisis conditions have made it difficult or impossible for families to afford them.

By providing cash, families can decide for themselves what to buy, according to their own specific needs. The program is meant to complement direct delivery of humanitarian supplies.

Here are a few examples of how cash assistance is having a positive impact for children in countries around the world.

Cash assistance in Yemen: reducing risks of child labor and child marriage

Providing unconditional cash transfers to families in need in Yemen has long been an important component of UNICEF’s response to the protracted humanitarian crisis in the country. The program, which helps beneficiaries buy food and pay for health care and other essential services, has reached millions of families in recent years, helping them avoid desperate measures like sending children to work or into an early marriage. 

Years of war in Yemen has pushed the nation into a near-permanent state of food insecurity. Today, there are more than 2.3 million children across the country who are acutely malnourished. Nearly 400,000 are severely malnourished. UNICEF continues to work with partners to link families with case managers who can coordinate the assistance and make service referrals.

In Yemen, a family supported by UNICEF sits down to a meal. UNICEF’s cash transfer program in the country is an integral part of the emergency response to widespread food insecurity exacerbated by years of conflict and economic strife. © UNICEF Yemen 

Cash assistance in Syria: helping families still struggling after years of conflict  winter get through the winter

Cash assistance is helping thousands of families like Maysaa’s of Aleppo. Displaced for four years by the country’s ongoing conflict, Maysaa is struggling to care for her children in a house damaged by war. In September, Maysaa registered for help through UNICEF’s winter assistance program, which includes three rounds of unconditional cash payments during the coldest winter months to help vulnerable families with children cover costs of fuel for heating, gas for cooking, warm clothes and blankets.

Maysaa received her first cash transfer, the equivalent of $60, in November 2022. She spent the money buying winter clothes for her children and plans on spending the second payment on fuel.

UNICEF aims to reach 9,500 families living in the most vulnerable neighborhoods in Aleppo with the multi-purpose cash for winter assistance.

Yasmin Hulou of UNICEF visits with Radwan, 9, and his sister Rimas, 5, at their home in the Tal Az-Zarazir neighborhood of Aleppo, Syria, on Nov. 17, 2022. © UNICEF/UN0742199/Janji

Cash assistance in the DRC: improving child nutrition

Pauline of Manono, Tangayika Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo, is a beneficiary of a UNICEF program called Cash for Nutrition, designed specifically for families with acutely malnourished children — helping to make sure that, once children are treated and recover, that they do not relapse.

This requires a diverse diet. 

Pauline’s son Prezo used to eat only one meal of cassava a day. Now he has regular access to meat, fish and eggs, and eats several times a day. 

Pauline used the cash assistance she received to restart her bread oven and launch a separate small business selling palm oil — earning enough income to afford the different foods for her child. Selling about 1,000 loaves of bread each month, she is able to cover other basic household expenses as well.

The support from UNICEF “saved my son,” Pauline says. “I am very grateful.”

Solange is another mother of a severely malnourished child who used the cash assistance she received from UNICEF to invest in a new source of income. “I chose to start raising goats,” she says. “I know that my children will not go hungry anymore, and if they get sick, the sale of a goat will help us.”

Solange and her two-year-old daughter, who had been severely malnourished. Solange is able to buy nutritious food with the cash assistance she receives from UNICEF. She also used some of the money to buy goats. © UNICEF/UN0689992/Ngombua

Cash assistance in Afghanistan: mitigating child protection risks amid economic collapse

In the months following the Taliban takeover, the freezing of Afghan international reserves, sudden stop in public spending and employment, and the near collapse of the national economy resulted in a precipitous decline in household-level conditions across the country. The decline triggered many households to adopt negative coping mechanisms for survival, including reports of families selling off children, often for child marriage.

Badghis Province was one of the most affected areas in the country. The multipurpose cash transfer program in the area aims to mitigate these and other risks to children’s safety and well-being by helpig vulnerable families overcome financial barriers and access essential goods and services. The program is delivering cash transfers to more than 36,000 households — reaching approximately 130,000 children across the province over a three-month period. Each household receives a monthly payment of equivalent of $90 per month.

A child and caregiver in Badghis Province, Afghanistan, recipients of UNICEF’s humanitarian cash assistance program. © UNICEF/UN0716658/Bidel

Cash assistance in Ukraine: example tk

UNICEF’s ‘Spilno’ cash assistance program in Ukraine has already reached hundreds of thousands of children and families displaced and otherwise impacted by the war.

That includes Yuliana, who fled eastern Ukraine with her five children and one grandchild when their village came under shelling, leaving everything behind. 

“We came with nothing, just the clothes we were wearing,” Yuliana says.

With the money she received through the program, Yuliana bought warm clothes and shoes, blankets and other items, including mobile phones for the children so they could access remote learning.

Spilno prioritizes families with three or more children and those raising at least one child with a disability across Ukraine. The target beneficiary group is based on a 2020 child poverty report, which found that 47 percent of families in Ukraine were living in poverty; and that among these, 81 percent of households with three or more children lived below the national poverty line.

“This program is about helping families in a crisis do what they believe is best for their children,” says Murat Sahin, UNICEF Representative in Ukraine. “No one is in a better position to decide how to get the most out of this support than a parent or guardian.”

In 2020, UNICEF issued an urgent call for Universal Child Benefits — cash benefits paid to all families with children — to counter the economic fallout from COVID-19. Learn more.

Help UNICEF reach more families in crisis with the support they need to access essential goods and services. Donate today.

TOP PHOTO: With cash assistance from UNICEF, Pauline of Manono, Tangayika province, Democratic Republic of the Congo, was able to restart her bread business and earn enough money to diversify her child’s diet and keep him well nourished. © UNICEF/UN0689304/Ngombua

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