An assessment of the Francois-Xavier Bagnoud poverty alleviation program in Rwanda and Uganda

Int J Public Health. 2017 Mar;62(2):241-252. doi: 10.1007/s00038-016-0907-8. Epub 2016 Oct 28.

Abstract

Objectives: We evaluate the three-year community-based FXBVillage poverty-alleviation model, which provides extremely poor families with sustained social support and graduated material support for education, healthcare, housing, nutrition, and income-generation.

Methods: We combine a pre/post analysis of participant households in Rwanda (n = 912) and Uganda (n = 628) with construction and assessment of a combined multivariable household wealth index comparing FXBVillage data with national Demographic Health Surveys.

Results: Many FXBVillage households shifted to higher household wealth quintiles. This shift was particularly strong in Rwanda. Increases among relevant household characteristics included (in Rwanda/Uganda): ≥3 meals/day (5-88%)/(44-86%), school attendance 5-17 years (79-97%)/(64-89%), adequate school supplies (7-97%)/(4-71%), and communal financial support if needed (27-98%)/(29-87%). Universal bednet ownership and water treatment was nearly attained; vaccine coverage was not, especially in Uganda.

Conclusions: The model likely supports poverty-alleviation among participants. The variability of improvements, across indicators and countries, highlights the need for better understanding of interactions within programs and between programs and implementation settings, as well as how these interactions matter to poverty-reduction strategies.

Keywords: Evaluation; Graduation program; Poverty reduction; Rwanda; Uganda; Ultra-poor.

Publication types

  • Evaluation Study

MeSH terms

  • Financial Support
  • Humans
  • Poverty / prevention & control*
  • Program Evaluation
  • Rwanda
  • Social Support
  • Uganda