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CashCast: A podcast from the CALP Network - 1.5: A Short History of Cash and Voucher Assistance

1.5: A Short History of Cash and Voucher Assistance

04/15/21 • 55 min

CashCast: A podcast from the CALP Network

In this episode we take a look back over the evolution of cash and voucher assistance (CVA) and then leap forward to explore where it’s going next.

15 years ago, the use of CVA was still seen as a fringe activity limited to a small number of scattered projects. Even 6 years ago, it made up less than 8% of international humanitarian assistance.

In the last few years, growth has been rapid. It is now an essential part of almost every response and accounted for a very significant one fifth of international humanitarian assistance in 2019.

With CaLP’s 15th anniversary only recently behind us, Karen Peachey, CaLP’s Director is joined by a panel of guests to discuss what’s changed in CVA and to share their hopes and fears for the future. Each guest has played a key role in the journey of CVA and collectively and have a wealth of insights to share.

Discussions touched on many themes including:

  • How cash rose from the fringes to arrive in its more established position today,
  • The role that evidence has played for CVA especially in comparisons to in-kind
  • The role of key governmental, political and humanitarian allies in advancing the growth of cash
  • The tendency to wrap CVA up in a language of innovation when fundamentally it is about enabling people impacted by crisis to be the agents of their own recovery
  • The need to work better with both private sector and humanitarian partners
  • An aspiration for the future to truly devolve power to people affected by crisis

Guests:

Dr Jemilah Mahmood has been a key player in some of the big political developments around cash. She is currently serving as the Special Advisor to the Prime Minister of Malaysia on Public Health. Before that, she was Under-Secretary General at IFRC and led the Secretariat of the World Humanitarian Summit, where humanitarian actors were urged to ask “why not cash, and if not now -- when”.

Sarah Bailey has been instrumental in building the evidence base for cash. She is currently WFP’s Head of Programme in Barbados, and previously worked for ODI, generating much of the most influential evidence around the effectiveness, efficiency and transformational potential of CVA.

Nigel Timmins has been a key player in building and supporting the partnerships and networks that have helped cash to grow. He is the Humanitarian Director of Oxfam International, and served at the Chair of CaLP’s Board, for four years before stepping down in 2019.

Zehra Rizvi has been a passionate and motivated cash advocate from the start of this journey. She is a CVA and social protection specialist and currently works for UNICEF in the MENA region. Before that, she has worked on cash with many organisations and as an independent consultant. She was also a member of CaLP’s first Steering Committee in 2008 representing the British Red Cross.

Our guests join us to share their own thoughts and experiences and are not acting as spokespeople for any particular origination.

Keep an eye out for a blog summarising the discussions which will be published on the CaLP website: https://www.calpnetwork.org/blog/

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In this episode we take a look back over the evolution of cash and voucher assistance (CVA) and then leap forward to explore where it’s going next.

15 years ago, the use of CVA was still seen as a fringe activity limited to a small number of scattered projects. Even 6 years ago, it made up less than 8% of international humanitarian assistance.

In the last few years, growth has been rapid. It is now an essential part of almost every response and accounted for a very significant one fifth of international humanitarian assistance in 2019.

With CaLP’s 15th anniversary only recently behind us, Karen Peachey, CaLP’s Director is joined by a panel of guests to discuss what’s changed in CVA and to share their hopes and fears for the future. Each guest has played a key role in the journey of CVA and collectively and have a wealth of insights to share.

Discussions touched on many themes including:

  • How cash rose from the fringes to arrive in its more established position today,
  • The role that evidence has played for CVA especially in comparisons to in-kind
  • The role of key governmental, political and humanitarian allies in advancing the growth of cash
  • The tendency to wrap CVA up in a language of innovation when fundamentally it is about enabling people impacted by crisis to be the agents of their own recovery
  • The need to work better with both private sector and humanitarian partners
  • An aspiration for the future to truly devolve power to people affected by crisis

Guests:

Dr Jemilah Mahmood has been a key player in some of the big political developments around cash. She is currently serving as the Special Advisor to the Prime Minister of Malaysia on Public Health. Before that, she was Under-Secretary General at IFRC and led the Secretariat of the World Humanitarian Summit, where humanitarian actors were urged to ask “why not cash, and if not now -- when”.

Sarah Bailey has been instrumental in building the evidence base for cash. She is currently WFP’s Head of Programme in Barbados, and previously worked for ODI, generating much of the most influential evidence around the effectiveness, efficiency and transformational potential of CVA.

Nigel Timmins has been a key player in building and supporting the partnerships and networks that have helped cash to grow. He is the Humanitarian Director of Oxfam International, and served at the Chair of CaLP’s Board, for four years before stepping down in 2019.

Zehra Rizvi has been a passionate and motivated cash advocate from the start of this journey. She is a CVA and social protection specialist and currently works for UNICEF in the MENA region. Before that, she has worked on cash with many organisations and as an independent consultant. She was also a member of CaLP’s first Steering Committee in 2008 representing the British Red Cross.

Our guests join us to share their own thoughts and experiences and are not acting as spokespeople for any particular origination.

Keep an eye out for a blog summarising the discussions which will be published on the CaLP website: https://www.calpnetwork.org/blog/

Previous Episode

undefined - 1.4. How to link social protection and humanitarian CVA: What do we really know and where to start?

1.4. How to link social protection and humanitarian CVA: What do we really know and where to start?

In this episode of the CashCast, we explore how to Link Social Protection and Humanitarian Cash and Voucher Assistance. We recorded this episode following the release of the High-Level Briefing Paper on Linking Social Protection and Humanitarian Cash and Voucher Assistance - https://bit.ly/3ibPBxb. The panel examined the different contexts in which efforts are being made to link CVA and social protection, the good practices evolving out of these contexts, and the complexity of operating in crisis contexts.
Our guests and host included:

  • Julie Lawson-McDowall (host) - Knowledge Management and Research Coordinator at CaLP
  • Paul Harvey - Researcher and consultant at from Humanitarian Outcomes
  • Daniel Longhurst - Researcher and consultant
  • Rachel Sabates-Wheeler - Development Economist at The Institute of Development Studies
  • Orhan Hacimehmet - Cash response Coordinator at the Turkish Red Crescent

If you have any questions please contact us - https://www.calpnetwork.org/about/contact/

Next Episode

undefined - 1.6 (Sp): ¿Estamos listos para usar las transferencias monetarias para prepararnos para las crisis en América Latina y el Caribe?

1.6 (Sp): ¿Estamos listos para usar las transferencias monetarias para prepararnos para las crisis en América Latina y el Caribe?

En este sexto episodio de CashCast exploramos esta pregunta junto a expertos, con años de experiencia en la región, para analizar las potenciales oportunidades, los beneficios y desafíos de vincular la protección social y las transferencias monetarias humanitarias para la preparación ante las crisis.

De acuerdo con un reporte de la Oficina de Coordinación de Asuntos Humanitarios de las Naciones Unidas (OCHA), entre los años 2000 y 2019 ocurrieron 1.200 desastres que afectaron a alrededor de 152 millones de personas en la región de América Latina y el Caribe. Además, en un reciente estudio de la Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (CEPAL) se establece que hubo un incremento en la pobreza extrema que alcanzó a 86 millones de personas en 2021 debido a profundas crisis sociales y de salud.

Ante este contexto, en este episodio de CashCast nuestro panel de expertos explora las siguientes preguntas:

  • ¿Cómo los programas de transferencias monetarias (PTM) pueden contribuir de forma efectiva a los sistemas de protección social con el fin de mejorar las vidas de millones de personas afectadas por las crisis?
  • ¿Qué podemos aprender de programas en la región en los que ha existido un fuerte vínculo entre protección social y PTM humanitarios para la preparación ante las crisis?
  • ¿Cuáles son los retos, factores facilitadores, barreras y oportunidades de usar estas modalidades en esta nueva forma?

El anfitrión e invitados son:

  • José Jodar (anfitrión) – Senior Technical Officer de la CALP Network
  • Celia Gonzalez – Iniciativa CashCap, actualmente se encuentra en Colombia apoyando la creación y consolidación de un grupo de trabajo sobre protección social dentro del marco del grupo de trabajo de transferencias monetarias.
  • Oscar Portillo – GOAL Internacional, trabaja en la preparación de sistemas nacionales de respuesta en cuatro países: Honduras, Guatemala, el Salvador y República Dominicana.
  • Florencia Alejandre – UNICEF, especialista en protección social en la Oficina Regional de este organismo para América Latina y el Caribe.

¡Le invitamos a escuchar esta fascinante y profunda conversación!

La idea para este episodio de CashCast surgió de nuestro reciente estudio, Programas de Transferencias Monetarias en el marco de los sistemas de protección social en la preparación ante las crisis en América Central, México y República Dominicana, comisionado por la CALP Network. Para ampliar aun más sobre este tema le invitamos a explorar la colección de recursos disponibles en torno al estudio, que incluyen dos estudios de casos (uno de Honduras y el otro de República Dominicana); un video explicativo sobre los principales hallazgos del estudio; infografías; la grabación del webinario del lanzamiento de este informe; además de un enlace a una entrada de Blog que aborda sobre este tema.
El CashCast es un podcast de la CALP Network que explora a profundidad los debates críticos sobre programas de transferencias monetarias (PTM) humanitarios.

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