Child sponsorship is a leading form of direct aid from households in wealthy countries to children in developing countries, with approximately 3.39 billion dollars spent to sponsor 9.14 million children internationally. A new study published in the Journal of Political Economy shows international child sponsorship to result in markedly higher rates of
schooling1 completion and substantially improved adult employment outcomes. Researchers used first-hand survey data from a study of
Compassion2 International, a leading child sponsorship organization, to examine the adult life outcomes of a group of 10,144 individuals in Bolivia, Guatemala, India, Kenya, the Philippines, and Uganda that included children who began sponsorship through the program a generation ago. The study estimates
causal effects(因果效应) on adult life outcomes in areas such as educational completion, type of employment, and community leadership.
Specifically, the study finds that international sponsorship increased the probability of a child completing secondary school by 27%-40%, completing a university education by 50%-80%, and obtaining a white-collar job as an adult by about 35%.
Despite the billions of dollars that flow to child sponsorship each year and the millions of American families who sponsor overseas children, this is the first published study to investigate whether such programs actually benefit the children they intend to help. Evidence from the study points to the positive effects of child sponsorship on the adult life outcomes of these children.
Compassion's program places a strong emphasis not only on providing for the basic needs, such as school tuition and healthcare, but also on
nurturing3 children's life
aspirations4 and self-esteem over what is typically a decade of
participation5 in sponsorship programs. "Too often we have focused our development efforts on provision for human beings rather than the development of human beings," said Bruce Wydick, one of the study's authors. "Although child sponsorship does indeed provide help with school fees, access to health care, and other
tangible6 benefits, Compassion's particular approach focuses on the more
holistic7(整体的) development of the child, such as development of self-esteem, aspirations, spiritual and
ethical8 values. In follow-up studies involving currently sponsored children, we measure very large impacts in these areas, which we believe play a significant role in what we observe in the difference in adult life outcomes."
While further research is needed to establish a causal link between aspirations and adult life outcomes, this study has
intriguing9 implications for the way we view economic development. Said Wydick, "I believe our research contributes to a new and growing body of
investigation10 that seeks to examine the importance of 'internal
constraints11' to economic development -- the importance of aspirations, self-esteem, goals, and reference points related to behaviors that are
propitious12 to(有利于) helping13 the poor escape poverty."