4.3 Article

Counting chickens before they hatch: transformational accounting in a development cash transfer program

Journal

JOURNAL OF CULTURAL ECONOMY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17530350.2023.2261449

Keywords

International development; Cash transfers; Policy narratives; Tanzania

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This article investigates the role of narratives in international development by analyzing a cash transfer program in Tanzania. It explores how narratives are used to show the impact of small payments on policy changes. Development programs often use exaggerated claims to describe the expected changes for those in need of development. This overstatement perpetuates discussions on personal and financial responsibility and sustains the political and organizational arrangements of aid.
This article investigates the role of narratives in international development through an ethnographic analysis of a cash transfer program. Tanzania's Productive Social Safety Net makes small. Regular payments to some of the poorest households in the country. Implementation centers on public activities accompanying payouts where beneficiaries recount changes they have been able to make through their productive use of program money. Narratives are fundamental to cash transfer programs where agencies have to show that the very small payments poor households receive lead to the substantial changes made in policy claims. Development programs invoke distinct rhetorical forms in order to make hyperbolic claims about the changes people needing development are expected to achieve, despite limited resources. Transformational accounting adopts the dramaturgical conventions of 'relational accounting' to situate aid recipients in tales of self-generated transformation that provide the basis for ongoing improvement. The systematic overstatement of impacts from interventions perpetuates longstanding discourses about personal and financial responsibility, sustaining political economies of aid and its organizational arrangements which benefit vested interests.

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