NAIROBI, Kenya – In 2008, when Mohamed Ali Mohamed was a child rising up in Mogadishu, Somalia, his cousin was shot by the Somali terrorist group al-Shabaab. “That made us run away,” he mentioned.
He and his grandmother walked to the border with Kenya and settled in Nairobi. As a teen, Mohamed would get up at 5 am to ship bread to close by outlets earlier than faculty, nevertheless it barely earned him sufficient to feed himself and his youthful brother, who adopted later.
Then final yr, the evidence-based nonprofit GiveDirectly gave him almost $1,000 money, no strings hooked up. He used the cash to begin a enterprise promoting filtered ingesting water to native outlets, and even employed two staff to ship it. Now 22, he earns a number of occasions as a lot as he used to promoting bread. The additional earnings goes to purchase meals and pay his youthful brother’s faculty charges.
“I thank God, as a result of my brother is now getting an training,” Mohamed informed me once I met him in Nairobi in April.

In rural African villages and refugee camps, money help has lengthy been enhancing the lives of individuals displaced by local weather disasters, conflicts, and extra. However right this moment, the bulk of the world’s refugees reside in cities. And in contrast to the refugees who reside in humanitarian camps and obtain meals rations, and typically shelter and medical consideration as effectively, city refugees not often obtain help of any type.
A research final yr by GiveDirectly in Kenya suggests a promising new approach to assist them. If its outcomes may be replicated, money transfers might assist roughly half of the world’s estimated 130 million displaced folks, the vast majority of whom reside in city facilities throughout the growing world.
Almost 1,200 folks in Nairobi got $925 every to spend nonetheless they wished, most of them opening their first Kenyan checking account on the identical time. The overwhelming majority used the cash to begin or develop small companies, from salons and barber outlets to pharmacies and hen coops. Recipients almost doubled their common month-to-month earnings to 18,600 shillings — about $143 US — per 30 days.
Six months later, 88 p.c of recipients reported incomes more cash than earlier than. And an identical research in a semi-urban settlement in Uganda discovered that the variety of refugee money recipients there who have been in a position to pay lease and feed their households had tripled, and extra folks might afford the well being care they wanted. Many spent their newfound earnings on kids’s faculty charges, like Mohamed did, or to develop current companies.
Options like this are pressing in a world that’s now house to extra displaced folks than ever earlier than. From Sudan to Syria and from Congo to Gaza and Ukraine, wars are forcing thousands and thousands of individuals to flee their houses. Many flee first to refugee camps, however the majority will ultimately settle in cities. With world battle exhibiting no indicators of abating, the world should determine a approach to assist city refugees survive of their new houses.
Can money assist the world’s most susceptible refugees?
Because the UN continues to scale back already meager meals rations in camps in Africa and Asia, many individuals really feel they’ve little alternative however to migrate to cities to search out work. Refugees in Kenya want particular permission to depart the camps — permission that native authorities don’t simply grant, in response to the World Financial institution. Nonetheless, in Kenya, the share of refugees who reside in cities climbed by 9 p.c from 2022 to 2023 alone to 91,600 folks, in response to the UN’s refugee company. Unable to search out work because of their refugee standing, language boundaries, immobility, lack of group connections, or all the above, city refugees are typically the poorest of the nation’s poor.
Jeanne Nakazungu, a mom of 4, fled Congo in 2016 when a Mai-Mai militia attacked her husband’s village, killing his relations and burning it down.
“I hear my husband is alive. However I’m unsure,” she mentioned one morning in her room behind a stall in Nairobi’s Kasarani neighborhood the place she sells bananas, tomatoes, and child eggplants. She additionally cooks a pot of purple beans that neighbors purchase for lunch. (Her daughter Denise, 14, interprets from her and her mom’s native language of Kinyamulenge.)

When Nakazungu first heard {that a} charity would give her more cash than she’d ever imagined, “I didn’t suppose it was true. I used to be so completely satisfied — I ran and informed my youngsters. I paid faculty charges, lease, (purchased provides) for my enterprise.” She hopes her household will sometime manage to pay for to resettle within the US.
“In rural areas, you employ the cash from GiveDirectly for the long run. You construct a home; you purchase a cow,” mentioned Stephen Kalungu, who oversees GiveDirectly’s Nairobi program. “However whenever you come to the city areas, there’s a fast tempo. You give somebody cash right this moment and tomorrow they report back to you that they have been already in a position to purchase stock or make a sale.”
However for Nakazungu, life as an city refugee is pricey as a result of it comes with an added value past what her Kenyan neighbors should pay: bribes. Almost each week, metropolis staff stroll up and down the road checking to verify all of the outlets are licensed. As a refugee, she says she has been unable to acquire one. “Kenyans close by, they’ve licenses,” she defined, so “they don’t must pay.”
Mohamed, who wears a white Islamic Thobe gown and walks with a limp, too says refugees like him have it even more durable than Kenyan metropolis dwellers do.
Till the 2021 Refugee Act is carried out, refugees in Kenya aren’t allowed to acquire SIM playing cards, which small companies depend on to speak with clients and make and obtain funds utilizing cell cash, which Kenyans have been utilizing since 2007, lengthy earlier than Venmo and Apple Pay. The result’s yet one more expense: To get a SIM card, mentioned Mohamed, “you need to pay a bribe.”

The foundations for refugees in Kenya differ markedly from these in neighboring Uganda to the west, the place GiveDirectly just lately performed a big research to assist refugees residing in semi-rural settlements.
There, refugees are “free to reside wherever they wish to reside (which) makes it fairly straightforward to do packages,” mentioned Miriam Laker, GiveDirectly’s director of analysis. “In Uganda, the refugee legislation may be very lenient, very welcoming. However in Kenya, there’s nonetheless restrictions.”
“For a refugee to get a job in mainstream employment is just about inconceivable, as a result of the legislation doesn’t enable it,” Laker says.
This underscores one of many main dilemmas going through the world’s city refugees.
“Money transfers have massive potential to assist these in city areas, significantly refugees, with primary requirements: meals shelter, transport, [because] cities have very well-functioning markets,” mentioned Rema Hanna, who teaches worldwide improvement at Harvard Kennedy Faculty and researches methods to enhance public companies to the poorest of the poor for the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Motion Lab (J-PAL).
However unsure authorized standing and discrimination may be huge challenges for refugees, Hanna mentioned. For instance, folks could not wish to lease housing to refugees, forcing them to search out worse or dearer housing. Refugees could obtain decrease wages as a result of they’ve few alternatives and subsequently little leverage.
“Money transfers will not essentially remedy these long-run points,” Hanna mentioned.
One other concern about giving money to refugees is the political ramifications at house. Some Kenyans affiliate refugees with terrorism, because of occasional assaults within the nation by the Somali terror group al-Shabaab. And native folks residing in poverty can come to resent refugees, Laker mentioned, whom they see as receiving particular therapy from worldwide help teams.

Xenophobic Kenyan politicians fan the flames, calling for crackdowns on refugees or threatening to close down Kenya’s refugee camps and ship the refugees house. “The legal guidelines and the politicians make it very onerous for them to offer them confidence that their companies are going to final,” mentioned Laker, which discourages funding. “If they’re despatched away, they might lose the whole lot.”
GiveDirectly is taking steps to ameliorate this thorny political downside: Thirty p.c of recipients in its subsequent spherical of money transfers in Nairobi will probably be Kenyans, the opposite 70 p.c will probably be refugees. This may even enable researchers to seek for insights into how refugees spend the funds in a different way than locals do.
“Having authorities packages only for refugees could spark resentment,” Hanna mentioned. “Residents typically have considerations about offering transfers to refugees reasonably than residents, who can also be in want. Understanding the politics and make the packages have wider-spread help will probably be key for his or her scale-up.”
Discrimination and abuse by legislation enforcement additionally haunts refugees. Uwizeye Harmless, 54, fled Rwanda in 2006 after police underneath the federal government of autocrat Paul Kagame threatened him as a result of he was a Hutu married to a Tutsi.
Upon arriving in Nairobi, he skilled police harassment there, too. On three events he was kidnapped by police who demanded he pay a bribe to be launched; Kenyan police routinely kidnap, extort, rape, and torture refugees. As soon as, they requested him for 8,000 shillings — more cash than he earned in every week.
“One other particular person paid for me. It took three weeks [of work] to pay it again,” Harmless mentioned. One other time officers locked him in jail for an evening then pressured him to wash the police station the subsequent morning and pay 800 shillings (about $6 US) for his launch.
Others are fortunate sufficient to flee such abuse and set up themselves, with assist from packages like GiveDirectly’s, of their new house. Like Harmless, Diane Manirakiza, 36, fled Rwanda after her household was threatened by police. In Nairobi, whereas her dad was away, her stepmom threw her out of the home at age 14. She discovered shelter at a youth hostel for refugees and gave start to a child boy at age 16. She was incomes solely slightly cash as a hairdresser, touring to folks’s houses, scraping by.
Final yr Manirakiza used the cash GiveDirectly gave her to open a hen coup. They’ve 200 chickens who produce some 150 eggs every day. After paying for his or her feed, she saves about 10,000 shillings every month. She makes use of some to pay tuition for her son, now 19, who’s learning enterprise, and a few she is saving as much as broaden her hen enterprise.
“We’re okay. Kenya is nice,” she says, including that she hopes to purchase much more chickens quickly.

Can money cut back migration?
One of many greatest unanswered questions on money transfers is whether or not they may incentivize extra migration or encourage folks to remain the place they’re.
Mathewos Shifa, 48, was pressured to depart Ethiopia in December 2013 after authorities safety officers kidnapped, tortured, and beat him unconscious; they falsely accused him of serving to set up a protest for Ethiopia’s marginalized Oromo ethnic group, to which he belongs. After he awoke the subsequent day in a hospital, he fled throughout the border to Kenya’s Kakuma Refugee camp.
Unable to search out work within the camp, he moved in 2017 to Nairobi, the place he labored as a barber and break up the 300 shillings (about $1.50 on the time) he earned from every haircut with the store’s proprietor. After GiveDirectly gave him a grant, he opened a barbershop of his personal within the immigrant neighborhood of Eastleigh the place he now earns twice as a lot. He used the additional earnings to purchase a hairdryer and a small therapeutic massage machine; he put a few of it towards his financial savings to depart Kenya sooner or later.
“My dream is, God keen, to go to a different nation,” he says, in calm, good English with a deep, broadcaster-like voice. “We’re unable to return to Ethiopia, and we’re unsafe right here, too.”

A few of his colleagues have been taken away right here by Ethiopian authorities officers, Shifa mentioned, who stroll across the streets of Eastleigh gathering intelligence on potential dissidents and typically kidnapping them. “You by no means see them once more.”
For folks like Shifa, money help would possibly give refugees the cash they should migrate once more, even when that’s not the intention. A 2020 research discovered that money transfers on the Comoros islands off Africa’s southeastern coast elevated migration to the close by French island of Mayotte by 38 p.c. Money transfers might additionally entice much more refugees to maneuver to the cities the place that help is on the market.
Six months after receiving the money, round 8.5 p.c of recipients had left Nairobi, be it to maneuver to different locations in Kenya or overseas. (GiveDirectly plans to trace what number of recipients within the subsequent part of its research migrate in the long run). Though there have been just below 1,200 recipients and the research adopted them for under six months, the consequences of the transfers in that preliminary interval have been stark: On common, refugees’ earnings elevated by 81 p.c, and their collective financial savings elevated by 57 p.c. They spent 30 p.c of the cash on current companies, and 15 p.c on beginning new ones. Almost 900 of the almost 1,200 refugees who obtained money opened financial institution accounts.
By the point GiveDirectly discovered Harmless, the carpenter from Rwanda, he was affected by extreme abdomen ache. He used the cash to bear belly surgical procedure and to purchase a truckful of wooden, which he carves into masks after which paints to promote to vacationers as souvenirs.
Skinny and sporting a purple polo shirt and black denims, he exhibits off a few of his wares: small picket masks key chains and elaborate elephants and human collectible figurines. Two or thrice every week he sells his wares on the Masai Market in Nairobi, the place he earns 8,000 to 10,000 shillings — more cash in a day than what Kenyan police exhorted him for after kidnapping him. “Issues modified a lot!”

Subsequent part: Can money assist refugees escape poverty altogether?
Nonetheless, tragedy befell a number of the recipients. One refugee’s brother received sick and died, forcing her to spend a number of the money help on the treatment. She used the rest to pay lease, purchase meals, and begin a fish stand.
One other tried investing in crypto. One particular person moved from Kenya’s northern area, the place he ran a fish enterprise, to Nairobi to open a rug and curtain retailer. A number of purchased motorbikes and have become supply drivers. Some ladies used the cash to open magnificence salons.
GiveDirectly is designing a brand new, bigger research to see how money might help refugees combine into city environments: 4,500 recipients will obtain the equal of $725 every. The charity will intently monitor folks not for six months, however for 2 years, to see if recipients truly escape poverty for good.
The brand new part may even check whether or not including job expertise coaching or mentorship can amplify the consequences of giving money. One group of recipients will obtain solely money, whereas one other group will probably be provided quite a lot of coaching packages by Fairness Financial institution. Give Straight will evaluate their earnings to a 3rd group that received’t obtain both type of help, till after the two-year trial is thru.
“When refugees obtain money plus this fairness financial institution intervention, what occurs to them? What do they put money into?” Laker questioned. However the final purpose of this subsequent part, she mentioned, is to know, “Why do those who succeed, succeed? What boundaries preserve the opposite ones again?”
These are pressing questions in a world with extra refugees than ever earlier than amid a regarding enhance in battle and a discount in meals rations to refugees. The UK, France, and different international locations have diminished their overseas help budgets lately, and if reelected, former President Donald Trump might once more try and slash overseas help as he did throughout his first time period.
“Everyone is slicing help budgets proper now, globally,” mentioned Tyler G. Corridor, of GiveDirectly. “The world is working out of funding for protracted refugee crises. Numerous these folks aren’t going house. So the best way we spend our cash must be centered on escape. It’s ‘what can we do to combine you, since these different actors can’t provide you with 30 years of meals?’”
Because of the present shortage of worldwide help, there’s an argument that serving to solely a small proportion of refugees is unfair to the remaining.
“Generally we’re requested, why don’t you simply give smaller quantities of money [to more people]?” Laker mentioned. However “ought to they preserve receiving help as in the event that they’re in disaster mode? What can elevate them out of dependency?”
The outcomes from a big lump sum research performed in the Kiryandongo settlement in Uganda point out that it’s higher to assist folks put money into sustainable wealth creation. The structural-economic thought behind common money transfers is that lower-income international locations like Kenya have tons of employees however not sufficient work to do. By giving one-time transfers to these employees, they’ll create work alternatives for themselves, the pondering goes.

Photograph courtesy of Jacob Kushner
Nonetheless, Hanna, the scholar and impartial researcher on help to the worldwide poor, mentioned GiveDirectly ought to pay shut consideration to how its recipients are chosen, to make sure it’s reaching these most in want — reasonably than simply those that have already been helped by different organizations, as they presently do. GiveDirectly’s preliminary city refugee program recognized recipients through worldwide associate organizations reminiscent of HIAS, an American Jewish nonprofit that funds world packages to assist refugees, and UNHCR, the United Nations refugee company. The brand new, upcoming expanded program will incorporate recipients referred to them by native refugee-led organizations as effectively.
In the end, to finish world poverty for city refugees — in addition to everybody else — would require not solely modern new packages like GiveDirectly’s, but additionally extra funding and dedication from the rich nations and other people of the world. It wouldn’t take a lot: In line with an evaluation by the Brookings Establishment, if all of the world’s billionaires donated simply 1 p.c of their wealth to evidence-backed initiatives, it “would offer greater than sufficient sources to finish excessive poverty right this moment.”