GDLive Newsfeed
We check in with people at each stage of the cash transfer process to see how things are going. Take a look at some of their stories as they appear here in real-time.
Learn more about how recipients opt in to share their stories.
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2 years ago
Prizila
received a second payment.
"Even though I spent a portion of my first and second transfers on the construction of my current home, I was unable to finish the interior furnishing because I needed to budget for other things. In the coming year, I hope to increase my savings from casual labor and subsistence farming so that I can finish the interior walls and purchase new furniture. I am pleased with how far I have come, and I hope to have the furnishing completed by the end of the year."
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2 years ago
Christine
received a $423 second payment.
"I have a lot of hopes and aspirations to achieve and pray to God that all shall go well. I intend to start a business of buying and selling second-hand clothes. Currently, I deal in groceries but their returns are small and meager compared to the former. I am so optimistic that I will realize high returns to improve our living standards and afford a decent life that we so yearns for."
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2 years ago
Gahaha
received a $423 second payment.
"In my opinion, giving money to needy people in society is the greatest work that Give Directly does. More so, the organization lets the beneficiaries choose how they spend their cash transfers; we are allowed to spend the money on anything. They are so incredibly generous that there is nothing they can improve on, according to me."
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2 years ago
Nyabyenda
enrolled.
"We are living far from the Road and its a challenge for us to be able to operate any business, we currently have banana plantation but we do not have a location where we can sell banana juice so it requires us to sell to other retailers and the profit we get is not as much as we could generate directly from customers.
Currently, the season is not adequate for our crops. They are destroyed by heavy rain, and we will not be able to yield as it was before. And when we are not able to get money, we face some challenges in paying for our children's school fees and other school materials."
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2 years ago
Beatrice
received a $438 initial payment.
"The addition of a heifer to my dairy cow and the start of a poultry project are the most noticeable changes in my daily life since receiving my first transfer from GiveDirectly. I have been collecting at least 5 eggs per day, and selling them has been beneficial because I can use the proceeds to buy household goods and pay some bills. I am excited to expand the project in the future to accommodate more birds, and I am also looking forward to a plentiful supply of milk once the heifers calve and begin producing milk."
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2 years ago
Saumu
received a $423 second payment.
"According to my opinion, what Give Directly does so well is that they give out unconditional transfers, different people have different needs, and we have the freedom how to spend the transfers so long as it is something that does not harm us together with community members.
The transfers are given in lump sum amounts and this helps in planning purposes in terms of the developments that we would wish to engage in at a personal level. Unlike other projects where it is given in small amounts.
To avoid household conflict, what needs to be done differently is enrolling all the individuals in the household. During enrollment, those individuals who did not have responsibilities by then were left out of the program yet these are the same people who steal from their old and vulnerable parents.
Another thing that needs to be done differently is enrolling all the communities in a specific village for uniformity purposes and this will prevent too many complaints coming from the communities that are left out during the registration to the programs"
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2 years ago
Christine
received a $423 second payment.
"My community Kilifi is a very dry place. Vegetables are very rare as most of the time there are no rain. I have a plan of starting up a small business selling small fish, locally known as (Omena). Besides this, I am also planning to start up a business selling water to my community members. I will be installing a water tank for collection during the rainy season and this will be sold later during the drought season."
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2 years ago
Kaka
received a second payment.
"I do subsistence farming for a living. I am planning to start up a small business supplying maize to boarding schools. I usually do it although to homesteads on order. In the near future, I will be expanding and mostly the deliveries will be done by the motorcyclist as they will be in large quantities. The profits from the business will be taking care of my kids' school fees."
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2 years ago
Chengo
received a $438 second payment.
"In the next year and beyond, I am planning to start up a small business of kiosk, I will be constructing a small shop nearby my home. Shops and supermarkets are far away from my community and people walk far away to the shopping centres since they are located far away from us. I am therefore anticipating that it will attract as many clients as possible since it will be near them. Besides, I am also planning to do dairy farming so as to get milk for my family's consumption and for sale as well."
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2 years ago
Kangombe
received a $423 second payment.
"In my opinion, what GiveDirectly does well in this program is that we receive the transfers in lumpsum amounts. This helps in planning as one is in a position to do something huge as compared to when the transfers are given in small instalments.
The unlearned recipients are taught how to use mpesa. This has reduced the number of theft cases in the community as most of us managed to change our pins to a more secure code.
To avoid household conflict, what needs to be done differently is enrolling all the individuals in the household. During enrollment, those individuals who did not have responsibilities by then were left out of the program yet these are the same people who steal from their old and vulnerable parents.
Give Directly staff are very transparent during the enrollment process, they are so keen during the verification process and this ensures that none is left out during registration to the program.
Another thing that needs to be done differently is enrolling all the communities in a specific village for uniformity purposes and this will prevent too many complaints coming from the communities that are left out during the registration to the programs."
View Kangombe's
profile