Break it down: A disaggregated analysis of the effects of aid on stunting

1. Introduction

This study explores the capacity of foreign aid to protect children from the devastating consequences of stunting, or impaired growth. Stunting refers to being too short for one’s age due to chronic malnutrition and repeated infections during early life. Stunted children are unlikely to reach their potential height and their brains are unlikely to reach their full capacity. They therefore perform less well in school and fall sick more often than other children do. As adults, they tend to display lower levels of human capital and productive capacity, and more often suffer from chronic diseases (WHO, 2015; UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Group, 2021). Stunting is thus a strong marker of general child health and child development, with important long-term consequences for the individual, and, in countries with high prevalence, for society at large.

Globally, close to 150 million children under age 5 suffered from stunting in 2020. This represented a 27 percent reduction compared with the year 2000 (UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Group, 2021). However, these figures are from before the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, both of which have resulted in soaring energy prices and global shortages of grain and fertilizer. In addition, weather related shocks due to global warming increasingly disrupt food production. Thus, after decades of progress in fighting malnutrition and food insecurity, manifested by the “Zero Hunger” sustainable development goal (SDG2) in Agenda 2030 (UN, 2015), there has been a serious setback. Against this backdrop, the UN now warns of a global food crisis that could last for years and “tip tens of millions of people over the edge into food insecurity” (UN, 2022), and headlines speak of “the coming food catastrophe” (The Economist, 2022).

In view of these developments, investigating the capacity of foreign aid to prevent stunting in poor countries is key. This study focuses on Malawi, which is the country with the most complete geo-referenced record of aid projects from a broad range of donors, allowing for detailed and disaggregated analysis of local aid flows. Malawi is also one of the countries in the world with the highest prevalence of stunting (more on this in Section 3).

First, we ask whether aid projects, defined in a broad sense, help to reduce stunting in the local area. Next, we disaggregate the overall aid treatment and investigate when the potential treatment effects kick in and for how long they last, and how they vary depending on treatment intensity, type of project, and donor. Finally, we evaluate the robustness and heterogeneity of the estimated effects and explore possible mechanisms underlying the results.

To address these questions, we geographically match spatial data on aid projects in Malawi spanning the period 1998–2016, with respondents from four waves of the Demographic and Health Survey (DHS), conducted 2000–2016. Our benchmark sample consists of 26,604 children under the age of 5, matched with 778 aid project sites of 22 different donors.

Drawing on the anthropometric DHS data, we compute sex- and age-standardized height-for-age z-scores (HAZ scores), giving the number of standard deviations (SD) by which the observed child’s height-for-age differs from the mean of a child of the same age in a reference population. We use three outcome variables: 1) stunting (HAZ<=-2), 2) extreme stunting (HAZ<=-3), and 3) the continuous HAZ score. The latter is important since studies have shown that associations between growth faltering and risk of death or poor cognitive outcomes exist along a HAZ continuum, without a notable inflection point at –2 SD (Perumal et al., 2018). Furthermore, over dispersion, or measurement error, would render comparisons of stunting rates based on specific cutoffs less reliable (Ghosh et al., 2020).

We want our main explanatory variable to capture aid exposure, or treatment, during a critical period during the child’s early life. In the benchmark specification, we classify children as treated if they were born the same year as, or up to 3 years after, the start of a project located within 10 km of the survey cluster. In further estimations, we break down our treatment variable into multiple indicators depending on the number of years from project start to the birth of the child, the number of projects meeting the treatment criterion within the cutoff distance, the sectoral division of projects, and, finally, the donor in focus.

To identify the effect of aid, we rely on spatial and temporal variation in aid project coverage and survey rollout, coupled with variation in the year of birth of the child in relation to project start. In the main analysis, we start from the full sample, and then narrow down the control group in steps to ensure comparability with our treatment group. In the full sample estimations, we compare treated and untreated children within districts and within 55×55 km grid cells. In a next step, we restrict the sample to include only “ever-treated” clusters, consisting of survey clusters with a past, present, or future aid project within 10 km at the time of the survey, thus comparing only children living in areas that donors and the government have, at some point, deemed suitable for aid project localization. Finally, we restrict the sample to children born 0–3 years after project start (treated) and children born 2–4 years prior to project start (untreated) in ever-treated clusters.

In additional estimations we rely on sub-samples with variation in treatment status within clusters and across siblings within households, including cluster-by-year fixed effects and mother fixed effects, respectively. Furthermore, to ensure that treated and un-treated children are balanced on key covariates, we use coarsened exact matching (CEM) and run estimations based on a matched sample.

The empirical results consistently indicate a positive impact of early life aid exposure on child growth. The more we narrow down the comparison group to account for unobserved variation across time and space, the more pronounced the estimated treatment effect generally becomes. Treated children are around 2 percentage points less likely to be stunted in the least restrictive specification, compared with around 6 percentage points less likely to be stunted (4 in the case of severe stunting) in the most restrictive specification. Considering the continuous HAZ score, the corresponding effect sizes range from around 4 to 16 percent of a standard deviation. While no complete game changer, these effects are clearly not negligible.

As expected, there is significant treatment effect heterogeneity. First, we note that the positive treatment effects of aid projects on child growth materialize already for children born in the early project implementation phase, but do not remain for children born 4–5 years after project start. For children born within the treatment window, however, aid may help to protect against irreversible consequences of stunting that would otherwise have lasted a lifetime. With respect to treatment intensity, the results suggest no simple linear effect of the number of projects on our outcome variables of interest, but they nonetheless indicate that living near three or four projects fitting the treatment criteria has a stronger effect than living near one project. In terms of sectoral focus, we observe positive treatment effects for projects in the areas of rural development, infrastructure, vulnerability, and education, but somewhat surprisingly not for projects focusing on health, agriculture, and water and sanitation projects. Considering donor heterogeneity in the results, the treatment effects seem to be driven primarily by multilateral aid. This even though the bilateral donors – based on a key word search in the project activity descriptions provided by AidData – to a greater extent focus on more proximate determinants of stunting.

Our study contributes to the literature on the relationship between aid and health outcomes. To our knowledge, it is the first to use broad-based geocoded multi-donor aid data allowing for disaggregated analysis of the local effects of aid on impaired child growth in Africa.

Several earlier studies analyze the relationship between aid and various health outcomes (e.g., infant mortality, maternal mortality, life expectancy) at the country level. Some report a positive effect of aid (Arndt et al., 2015; Chauvet et al., 2013; Feeney and Ouattara, 2013; Gormanee et al., 2005; Gyimah-Brempong, 2015; Mishra and Newhouse, 2009; Pickbourn and Ndikumana, 2019; Taylor et al., 2013; Yogo and Mallaye, 2015), some find no relationship (Kizhakethalackal et al., 2013; Kosack and Tobin, 2006; Mukherjee and Kizhakkethalackal, 2013; Williamson, 2008; Wilson, 2011), and yet others find that the relationship depends on policy environment (Farag et al., 2013; Fielding, 2011). Two recent country-level studies estimate the impact of nutrition-related aid and agricultural aid on stunting. Khalid et al. (2019) find that interventions addressing immediate determinants of fetal and child nutrition reduce stunting, whereas no such treatment effects are observed for interventions influencing the underlying determinants of nutrition (such as water, sanitation and schooling). Mary et al. (2020) find moderate treatment effects of agricultural aid and larger effects of food aid.

While useful for uncovering broad patterns, the macro literature on aid effectiveness faces important challenges. First, it is difficult to establish causality. Receiving aid is associated with a multitude of country characteristics – known and unknown – that will tend to influence the estimates when seeking to establish the causal impact of aid (see, e.g., Bräutigam and Knack, 2004). Second, it is common to aggregate over aid flows that are provided for different purposes and thus should have different effects (see the discussion in Clemens et al., 2012 and Bourguignon and Gunning, 2016). Furthermore, the cross-country literature is not able to account for heterogeneity within countries. Many development projects target local development, arguably suggesting that they should be judged against location-specific outcomes (Findley et al., 2011). While (specific forms of) aid may have effects in targeted areas, these effects may not be sufficiently large to be measurable at country level or they may be obscured by omitted variable bias (Dreher and Lohmann, 2015). Against this background, we arguably need a finer lens when studying the effect of aid on child health outcomes.

At the micro level, there is a large literature evaluating the impact of specific interventions in a broad range of different areas on the nutritional status of children, with mixed findings. These include projects on nutritional supplements, feeding and/or behavioral change (e.g., Attanasio et al., 2014; Das et al., 2019; Attanasio et al., 2022a), conditional cash transfers (e.g., Cahyadi et al., 2020), nutrition-sensitive agriculture (for a review see Sharma et al., 2021) and antenatal care, water and sanitation and prevention and treatment of infectious diseases (for a recent overview see Vaivada et al., 2022).

Unlike impact evaluations, which focus on establishing the causal impact of specific interventions, we investigate the average impact of broad-based aid and aid broken down by sector and donor type. As illustrated by the so called ‘micro-macro paradox’ (Mosley, 1987), impacts of individual projects do not necessarily hold at a more aggregate level because of expenditure switching within the public sector, indirect effects on the private sector, or binding constraints (Rodrik, 2010). Sub-national analysis of geocoded aid and outcome data provides an intermediate perspective that can help bridge the micro-macro divide. Specifically, rather than estimating country-wide impacts of total aid, or analyzing the impact of specific interventions, it enables us to systematically estimate whether a multitude of aid projects have effects in the targeted areas on average, as well as to break down the analysis by donors and type of projects.

Our study contributes to the emerging literature evaluating sub-national effects of aid using geocoded aid and outcome data (e.g., Brazys et al., 2017; Civelli, et al., 2018; Isaksson and Kotsadam, 2018a,b; Dreher et al., 2019; Isaksson 2020; Isaksson and Durevall 2022). A few studies in this strand of literature focus on health outcomes. Odokonyero et al. (2018) find that health aid reduces the number of reported sick days of people living close to aid projects in Uganda. Two studies focus on Malawi. De and Becker (2015) find that health aid reduces workdays lost to illness and that water aid reduces the incidence of diarrhea. Marty et al. (2017) find that aid focusing on health infrastructure and parasitic disease control reduces malaria prevalence and improves self-reported healthcare quality. The above studies have in common that they primarily focus on health outcomes among adults.

To date, the literature evaluating sub-national effects of aid using geocoded aid and outcome data has seen relatively few attempts to explore the effects of aid on child health. Three papers find that aid helps to reduce infant mortality in the local area (Kotsadam et al., 2018, focusing on foreign aid to Nigeria; Wayoro and Ndikumana, 2020, focusing on World Bank aid to the Ivory Coast; and Widmer and Zurlinden, 2021, focusing on World Bank aid in a multi-country African sample). Rustad et al. (2020) study wasting, i.e., children being too thin for their height. Their results, based on a sample consisting of respondents from 16 African countries, suggest that aid helps reduce weight loss due to drought, but has little effect during normal meteorological conditions. Although both wasting and stunting are forms of malnutrition, they capture different conditions. Wasting is a marker of acute undernutrition, often indicating recent and severe weight loss. Stunting, on the other hand, captures linear growth faltering resulting from chronic or recurrent undernutrition due to inadequate dietary intakes and disease related nutrient loss (Wright et al., 2021). 1Hence, unlike Rustad et al., who consider whether aid helps to mitigate acute weight loss due to shocks, we investigate whether aid can help prevent the largely irreversible consequences of impaired child growth due to prolonged poor dietary and health conditions. 1Indeed, recent evidence suggests that most stunted children have never suffered wasting, and thus that the two conditions may have different causes (Wright et al., 2021). In line with this, Ngwira et al. (2017) find no association between wasting and stunting among Malawian children surveyed in 2010.

Source: AidData

Media Drop ‘Dilbert’ After Creator’s Black ‘Hate Group’ Remark

The creator of the Dilbert comic strip faced a backlash of cancellations Saturday while defending remarks describing people who are Black as members of “a hate group” from which white people should “get away.”

Various media publishers across the U.S. denounced the comments by Dilbert creator Scott Adams as racist, hateful and discriminatory while saying they would no longer provide a platform for his work.

Andrews McMeel Syndication, which distributes Dilbert, did not immediately respond Saturday to requests for comment. But Adams defended himself on social media against those who he said “hate me and are canceling me.”

Dilbert is a long-running comic that pokes fun at office-place culture.

The backlash began following an episode this past week of the YouTube show, Real Coffee with Scott Adams. Among other topics, Adams referenced a Rasmussen Reports survey that had asked whether people agreed with the statement “It’s OK to be white.”

Most agreed, but Adams noted that 26% of Black respondents disagreed and others weren’t sure.

The Anti-Defamation League says the phrase was popularized in 2017 as a trolling campaign by members of the discussion forum 4chan but then began being used by some white supremacists.

Adams, who is white, repeatedly referred to people who are Black as members of a “hate group” or a “racist hate group” and said he would no longer “help Black Americans.”

“Based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give to white people is to get the hell away from Black people,” Adams said on his Wednesday show.

In another episode of his online show Saturday, Adams said he had been making a point that “everyone should be treated as an individual” without discrimination.

“But you should also avoid any group that doesn’t respect you, even if there are people within the group who are fine,” Adams said.

The Los Angeles Times cited Adams’ “racist comments” while announcing Saturday that Dilbert will be discontinued Monday in most editions and that its final run in the Sunday comics — which are printed in advance — will be March 12.

The San Antonio Express-News, which is part of Hearst Newspapers, said Saturday that it will drop the Dilbert comic strip, effective Monday, “because of hateful and discriminatory public comments by its creator.”

The USA Today Network tweeted Friday that it also will stop publishing Dilbert “due to recent discriminatory comments by its creator.”

The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and other publications that are part of Advance Local media also announced that they are dropping Dilbert.

“This is a decision based on the principles of this news organization and the community we serve,” wrote Chris Quinn, editor of The Plain Dealer. “We are not a home for those who espouse racism. We certainly do not want to provide them with financial support.”

Christopher Kelly, vice president of content for NJ Advance Media, wrote that the news organization believes in “the free and fair exchange of ideas.”

“But when those ideas cross into hate speech, a line must be drawn,” Kelly wrote.

Source: Voice of America

Angela Bassett, ‘Wakanda Forever’ Top NAACP Image Awards

Angela Bassett won entertainer of the year at Saturday’s NAACP Image Awards on a night that also saw her take home an acting trophy for the television series “9-1-1.”

The Bassett-led Marvel superhero sequel “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” won best motion picture at the ceremony, which was broadcast live on BET from Pasadena, California.

Viola Davis won outstanding actress for the action epic “The Woman King,” a project she championed and starred in. Will Smith won for the slavery drama “Emancipation,” his first release since last year’s Academy Awards, where he slapped comedian Chris Rock on stage before winning his first best actor trophy.

“I never want to not be brave enough as a woman, as a Black woman, as an artist,” Davis said, referencing a quote from her character in the film, which she called her magnum opus. “I thank everyone who was involved with ‘The Woman King’ because that was just nothing but high-octane bravery.”

“Abbott Elementary” won for outstanding comedy series. Creator and series star Quinta Brunson invited her costars onstage and praised shows like “black-ish” for paving the way for her series.

The 54 NAACP Image Awards were presented Saturday in Pasadena, California, with Queen Latifah hosting. Serena Williams received the Jackie Robinson Sports award, which recognizes individuals in sports for high achievement in athletics along with their pursuit of social justice, civil rights and community involvement.

Source: Voice of America

UNICEF Malawi Humanitarian Flash Update No. 8 (Cholera) for 20 February 2023

The situation in Numbers (Cumulative)

• 18 million people at risk of contracting cholera, including more than 9 million children

• 45,784 Cases

• 1,468 Deaths

• 3.21% Case Fatality Rate (CFR)

• 11,500 Children Cases

• 188 Children Deaths

• 29 Districts Affected

Source: Ministry of Health’s press statement on Cholera update as of 19 th February 2023

Highlights

• As of February 19th, 45,784 cholera cases and 1,468 1 deaths have been registered in Malawi. A total of 12,042 children’s cases and 197 deaths among children were reported cumulatively as of the last update on February 12th, 2023.

• During the reporting week, 3,357 new cases and 84 new deaths were reported. There were 3,861 cases and 130 deaths in the previous week. In the case of children, 542 new cases and nine new deaths were reported in the reporting week compared to the previous one.

• The cumulative Case Fatality Rate (CFR) stands at 3.21 per cent, with the highest CFR of 5.41 per cent in Lilongwe and the lowest in the Mzimba North District (0.42).

• During the reporting week, infection, prevention, and control supplies of US$ 139,488 have been dispatched to 26 districts.

• An additional one thousand people got access to safe drinking water by rehabilitating non-functional boreholes, and over 657,000 people were reached with WASH-specific messaging through Gaka Community Radio.

Source: UN Children’s Fund

Synchronoss présentera sa plateforme de cloud personnel alimentée par IA lors du Mobile World Congress

Conçue tout spécialement et largement déployée par les plus grands opérateurs des télécommunications, la nouvelle plateforme Synchronoss Personal Cloud intègre les fonctions Genius, BackTrack et bien d’autres afin d’assurer la sécurité et la confidentialité des données

BRIDGEWATER, New Jersey, 23 févr. 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. (« Synchronoss » ou la « Société ») (NASDAQ : SNCR), un innovateur et leader mondial des plateformes et produits numériques, de messagerie et cloud, a annoncé aujourd’hui sa présentation à venir de la toute dernière version de Synchronoss Personal Cloud lors du Mobile World Congress à Barcelone, en Espagne.

La nouvelle plateforme Synchronoss Personal Cloud permet aux opérateurs de télécommunications d’offrir des services à valeur ajoutée et premium pour sauvegarder et gérer les fichiers, photos, vidéos et contenus numériques stockés sur les téléphones portables et autres appareils.

Tirant parti de l’intelligence artificielle (AI), la nouvelle fonction Genius fournit des outils permettant d’optimiser les photos. Les utilisateurs peuvent coloriser les photos en noir et blanc, améliorer les photos et retoucher les visages, entre autres effets. L’ajout de BackTrack fournit la capacité de revenir en arrière et de restaurer les fichiers supprimés, corrompus ou perdus. De plus, grâce à l’intégration de l’apprentissage automatique, la fonction Advanced Highlights de la plateforme simplifie la catégorisation et le balisage des photos, vidéos et autres contenus numériques afin qu’ils puissent être facilement mis en relief, gérés et partagés.

« Contrairement aux applications OTT, notre plateforme cloud fournit une solution de niveau opérateur permettant aux prestataires d’offrir des services à valeur ajoutée qui se concentrent aussi fortement sur la sécurité et la confidentialité des données », a déclaré Jeff Miller, PDG de Synchronoss. « Les capacités de l’apprentissage automatique et de l’IA générative nous permettent de proposer des fonctionnalités innovantes comme Genius, BackTrack et Advanced Highlights, offrant ainsi aux utilisateurs de nouvelles méthodes d’engagement et de partage de leur contenu numérique. »

Les nouvelles fonctions de Synchronoss Personal Cloud sont en train d’être déployées auprès de millions d’abonnés, y compris les utilisateurs de cloud chez AT&T, Verizon, et l’un des plus grands opérateurs mondiaux ayant récemment signé un accord de cloud pluriannuel dont le lancement aura lieu plus tard cette année.

À l’occasion du Mobile World Congress, Synchronoss présentera aussi sa plateforme de messagerie électronique de niveau opérateur, Synchronoss Email Suite. La société a récemment annoncé une nouvelle expansion de contrat avec un prestataire majeur fournissant des services de messagerie électronique à plus de 50 millions d’utilisateurs, s’appuyant sur Synchronoss Email Suite et la plateforme de messagerie de base Mx9.

« Représentant l’avenir de la connectivité et attirant les plus grands noms de l’industrie, le Mobile World Congress est un endroit prodigieux pour poursuivre l’impulsion des nouvelles plateformes Synchronoss Personal Cloud et Synchronoss Email Suite. Nous sommes impatients de travailler avec nos clients, partenaires et nouveaux prospects à l’échelle mondiale afin de proposer des solutions numériques, cloud et de messagerie innovantes générant de nouvelles opportunités de revenu pour leurs activités », a ajouté M. Miller.

Rencontrez-nous à Barcelone

Pour planifier une rencontre lors du Mobile World Congress, veuillez consulter la page : https://synchronoss.com/events/#schedule.

À propos de Synchronoss

Synchronoss Technologies (NASDAQ : SNCR) est un développeur de logiciels permettant aux entreprises du monde entier de se connecter à leurs abonnés de manière fiable et pertinente. Sa gamme de produits aide à rationaliser les réseaux, simplifier l’intégration et interagir avec les abonnés afin de créer de nouvelles sources de revenus, de réduire les coûts et d’accélérer la mise sur le marché. Plusieurs centaines de millions d’abonnés font confiance à Synchronoss pour rester en phase avec les individus, les services et les contenus qu’ils aiment. Pour en savoir plus, rendez-vous sur www.synchronoss.com.

Contact pour les relations avec les médias :
Domenick Cilea
Springboard
dcilea@springboardpr.com

Contact pour les relations avec les investisseurs :
Matt Glover/Tom Colton
Gateway Group, Inc.
SNCR@gatewayir.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8755542

Synchronoss Introduz Plataforma de Nuvem Pessoal Alimentada por IA no Mobile World Congress

Criada Especificamente e Amplamente Implantada pelas Principais Operadoras de Telecomunicações, a Nova Nuvem Pessoal Synchronoss Inclui Genius, BackTrack e Outros Recursos para Garantir a Segurança e a Privacidade dos Dados

BRIDGEWATER, N.J., Feb. 23, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. (“Synchronoss” ou a “Empresa”) (NASDAQ: SNCR), líder global e inovadora em nuvem, mensagens, e produtos e plataformas digitais, anunciou hoje o lançamento da versão mais recente do Synchronoss Personal Cloud no Mobile World Congress em Barcelona, Espanha.

A nova plataforma Synchronoss Personal Cloud permite que as operadoras de telecomunicações ofereçam serviços premium e de valor agregado de backup e gerenciamento de arquivos, fotos, vídeos e conteúdo digital armazenados em telefones celulares e outros dispositivos.

Com o uso da inteligência artificial (IA), o novo recurso Genius fornece ferramentas para otimização de fotos. Os usuários podem colorir fotos em preto e branco, aprimorar fotos e retocar rostos, entre outros efeitos. A adição do BackTrack fornece a capacidade de reverter e restaurar arquivos se eles forem excluídos, corrompidos ou perdidos. Além disso, ao integrar o aprendizado de máquina, o recurso Advanced Highlights da plataforma facilita a categorização e marcação de fotos, vídeos e outros conteúdos digitais para que possam ser facilmente destacados, gerenciados e compartilhados.

“Ao contrário dos aplicativos OTT, nossa plataforma na nuvem fornece uma solução de nível de operadora para que os provedores de serviços ofereçam serviços de valor agregado concentrados na segurança e na privacidade dos dados”, disse Jeff Miller, Presidente e CEO da Synchronoss. “Os recursos de IA geradora e de aprendizado de máquina nos permitem oferecer funcionalidades inovadoras, como Genius, BackTrack e Advanced Highlights, oferecendo aos usuários novas maneiras de envolver e compartilhar seu conteúdo digital.”

Os novos recursos do Synchronoss Personal Cloud estão sendo lançados para milhões de assinantes, incluindo usuários de nuvem da AT&T, Verizon e uma das maiores operadoras globais que recentemente assinou um contrato de nuvem de vários anos lançado no final deste ano.

No Mobile World Congress, a Synchronoss também apresentará sua plataforma de e-mail de nível de operadora, a Synchronoss Email Suite. A empresa anunciou recentemente uma nova expansão de contrato com um proeminente provedor de serviços que está fornecendo serviços de e-mail para mais de 50 milhões de usuários, alimentados pelo Synchronoss Email Suite e pela plataforma de mensagens principal Mx9.

“Representando o futuro da conectividade e atraindo os maiores nomes do setor, o Mobile World Congress é uma excelente oportunidade para aproveitar o impulso das novas plataformas Synchronoss Personal Cloud e Synchronoss Email Suite. Estamos prontos para trabalhar com nossos clientes, parceiros e clientes em potencial de todo o mundo para oferecer soluções inovadoras de nuvem, de mensagens e digitais que gerem novas oportunidades de receita para as empresas”, acrescentou Miller.

Conheça-nos em Barcelona

Para agendar uma reunião no Mobile World Congress, visite: https://synchronoss.com/events/#schedule.

Sobre a Synchronoss

A Synchronoss Technologies (NASDAQ: SNCR) cria software que capacita empresas ao redor do mundo a se conectarem com seus assinantes de forma confiável e significativa. O conjunto de produtos da empresa ajuda a agilizar as redes, simplificar a integração e envolver os assinantes, permitindo novos fluxos de receita, redução dos custos e aumento da velocidade no mercado. Centenas de milhões de assinantes confiam nos produtos da Synchronoss que se mantêm em sincronia com as pessoas, serviços e conteúdo que elas gostam. Saiba mais em www.synchronoss.com

Contato de Relações com a Mídia:
Domenick Cilea
Springboard
dcilea@springboardpr.com

Contato de Relações com Investidores:
Matt Glover/Tom Colton
Gateway Group, Inc.
SNCR@gatewayir.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8755542