Oct

24

2017

12:30—2:00 PM
Center for Global Development
2055 L St, NW
- Fifth Floor
Washington, DC 20036

Saving for (No) Sex: The Effects of Precautionary Savings on Transactional Sex

Featuring

Kelly Jones, International Food Policy Research Institute

Host

Justin Sandefur, Center for Global Development

Transactional sex (sex for money) is a common risk-coping behavior in sub-Saharan Africa and is believed to be a leading driver of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. In her upcoming paper, Kelly Jones and her coauthors examine whether access to precautionary savings can mitigate the use of transactional sex as a response to negative shocks. In a field experiment in Kenya, half of the over 600 vulnerable women participants were randomly assigned a savings intervention that consists of opening a mobile banking savings account labeled for emergency expenses and individual goals. They find that the intervention led to an increase in total mobile savings, reductions in transactional sex as a risk-coping response to shocks, and a decrease in symptoms of sexually transmitted infections.

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