Showing posts with label social protection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social protection. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Population ageing, intergenerational transfers and social protection in Latin America and the Caribbean


Countries in Latin America and the Caribbean are in the midst of a period of profound demographic change which will lead to a dramatic shift in the age structure of the population, with sharp declines in the proportion of children and increases in the proportion of older persons. Though they are at different stages in this process, the majority of countries in the region are currently in the midst of the period of the demographic dividend, which is characterized by a relative increase in the number of working-age people relative to those who are dependent upon them. However, sooner or later this favourable situation will end due to the rising demand for resources on the part of a progressively older population. The transition to economically-aged societies in Latin America and the Caribbean —in contrast to that of the more developed countries— will take place in a context of high and persistent levels of inequality and of lower per capita income and less developed political and financial institutions.

This new situation will pose unprecedented challenges to Latin American and Caribbean society and will require adjustments in diverse areas, especially in health and pensions. Ideally public policies should anticipate demographic changes, redesigning the financing mechanisms for social protection systems so that the increased pressure on public and private spending can be sustained financially without reducing the coverage and quality of benefits.

The social and economic impacts of changes in the age structure of the region’s population are the subject of ongoing reflection in the Population Division of the CELADE - ECLAC. In particular, the Division has been participating over the past two years in an international effort to measure national economic activity by age, in the context of the international project on National Transfer Accounts (NTA) led by professors Ronald Lee of the University of California, Berkeley, and Andrew Mason of the East-West Center in Honolulu.National Transfer Accounts (NTA) estimate the flows of economic resources between different age groups in a way that is consistent with national income and product accounts. These flows mainly arise due to the fact that children and the elderly tend to consume more than they produce from their work and therefore tend to depend on resources that mainly come from the working-age population to satisfy their consumption needs.

In addition to distinguishing between the different types of flows (capital accumulation, transfers and credit transactions), the accounts also distinguish between the institutions that mediate these operations, be they governments, markets or families. This information allows one to study, among other things, the consequences of ageing on transfer systems, both familial as well as public; the interaction between these two systems, and the economic effects on different generations of changes in support systems. In addition, intergenerational transfers represent a substantial proportion of GDP and for that reason their composition, order of magnitude and direction can influence economic growth as well as the income distribution.

Over 30 countries from five continents are currently participating in the global NTA project. These countries differ in terms of their demography, their levels of development, their systems for supporting people in old age, their capacity to invest in human capital, and their populations’ capacity to save. A comparative analysis of these countries’ accounts not only sheds light on these differences, but it also helps to clarify the economic implications that population ageing has under different institutional arrangements.

ECLAC, through CELADE, is coordinating the regional National Transfer Accounts project for Latin America and the Caribbean, with financial support from the Canadian International Development Research Centre (IDRC)2 and the University of California, Berkeley. The first stage of the project recently concluded with participation by five countries (Brazil, Costa Rica, Mexico and Uruguay). The second stage has also begun, for which 4 new countries were included: Argentina, Colombia, Jamaica, and Peru.

The overall objective of the project is to improve the fiscal sustainability and equity of social protection systems in Latin America in the face of population ageing. There are four specific aims: (i) To strengthen the capacities of participant national centers to develop, implement, and use NTA method; (ii) To better inform social protection policy decisions by an analysis of the impact of population ageing on economic growth, fiscal sustainability, and equity; (iii) To better inform policymakers on the importance of long-run transformations brought about by population ageing; and (iv) To foster cross country comparison, collaborations, and regional perspectives. Based on these goals, CELADE has made ample use of new information on the generational economy in Latin America. Diverse studies have been undertaken in this area, many of them in collaboration with other organizations like the United Nations Population Fund, the Pan-American Health Organization and the World Bank.

A significant proportion of these studies were focused on the cases of Brazil, Costa Rica, Chile, Mexico and Uruguay, the countries participating in the first stage of the project. The case of Brazil has been an interesting one, not just because of it represents a large share of the Latin American economy and population, but also because of the rapid ageing process its population is undergoing and the presence of a fairly significant public transfer system. In fact, toward the end of the 1980s a reform was introduced in the country to expand the coverage of the pension system to poor and rural sectors, in addition to informal workers, and it currently covers a large proportion of the population. In Chile the analysis of NTA has allowed the fiscal and macroeconomic implications of social reforms to be examined, especially in the areas of pensions and health, sectors that have undergone structural reforms over recent decades.

The case of Costa Rica has been an interesting one because of its citizens’ high life expectancy, the relative stagnation of social investment in education and the importance of its public health programs. For its part, Mexico is characterised by an intense migratory movement that, in addition to Mexicans, includes a significant number of people from other countries in the region, essentially Central Americans, who seek to reach the United States. This makes the analysis of private transfers (remittance movements) and other types of intergenerational reallocations particularly interesting. With regard to Uruguay, it bears the distinctive characteristics of being the oldest country in the region and having a long-standing social protection system with significant levels of coverage, which like Chile’s has undergone various reforms over recent decades.

In October 2009 CELADE, together with the Population Division of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs and in the context of the National Transfer Accounts project, organised a meeting of experts in which certain government representatives, in particular from the five countries participating in the project, as well as those from different regional and international organisations, analyzed the consequences of population ageing on economic growth and the sustainability of Latin American transfer systems using information produced in the first phase of the project. This volume presents a report on this expert meeting accompanied by a selection of articles that were presented there, including work by professors Ronald Lee and Andrew Mason, as well as and the national teams in each of the countries participating in the project.

The production of the document was coordinated by Tim Miller, Population Affairs Officer, and Paulo Saad, Chief of the Population and Development Area at CELADE; the editing by Colin Mullins; layout by Fernanda Stang, and translation of Chapters VI, VII and VIII from Spanish by Lila Castillo.LC/W.439. November 2011



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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

The Revised Social Protection Index: Methodology and Handbook


The publication and adoption of ADB’s Social Protection Strategy in 2001, along with the social protection (SP) strategies adopted by other international organizations and bilateral donors, heralded a growing recognition that the Millennium Development Goals for poverty reduction cannot be achieved purely through the promotion of economic growth and the development of physical and social infrastructure. Interventions are also necessary to address the needs of the poorest and to prevent members of vulnerable groups from falling into poverty following community-wide or household-specific shocks. Until then, few attempts had been made to date to comprehensively assess SP programs in developing countries and quantify the impact of SP activities.

The International Social Security Association maintains a database with basic information on formal social security schemes, and the International Labour Organization (ILO) launched in 2003 the Social Security Inquiry, which provides national and scheme-level administrative data on social security
around the world through a government self-reporting mechanism. Only a few countries in Asia and the Pacific produced high-quality statistics in SP programs.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) developed a social protection index (SPI) for Asia and the Pacific in 2005−2008. This original SPI was a tool that helped assess, measure, and compare SP programs in each of the study countries. It provided policymakers with a tool to analyze SP programs from the perspective of expenditures on SP, coverage, distribution, and impact on the poor and vulnerable population.

The original SPI was a summary measurement tool that systematically and consistently quantified national SP activities in Asia and the Pacific (Wood 2010). It was a composite index, with four components: a social protection expenditure indicator (SPEXP), a social protection coverage indicator (SPCOV), a social protection distribution indicator (SPDIST), and a social protection impact indicator (SPIMP).

SPEXP showed the percentage of a country’s gross domestic product (GDP) spent on SP programs. SPCOV showed the percentage of the reference population that received SP benefits. SPDIST (called the poverty targeting rate) showed the percentage of the poor that received SP benefits. SPIMP showed the per capita SP benefits going to the poor expressed as a proportion of the national poverty line. A summary SPI was constructed on the basis of normalizing each of these four indicators on a scale of 0 to 1 and adding them
with equal weights.

ADB.January 2012. Type: Guides.ADB administration and governance; Social development and protection. ISBN: 978-92-9092-496-8 (print), 978-92-9092-497-5 (web) 


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Friday, December 9, 2011

Suriname will improve social protection system with IDB support

News Releases.Dec 7, 2011. The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) has approved a $15 million loan for the Social Protection Support Program in Suriname. The project will support the efforts of the government of Suriname to enhance the effectiveness of spending on social protection programs. A key goal is to improve the efficiency of the targeting of low-income households so as to break the intergenerational transmission of poverty through the development of the human capital of children.

The current social protection system in Suriname consists of both targeted and untargeted transfer programs, including a cash transfer program for poor households, child allowances, disability grants, school supply grants, and health care services to the poor.

Those programs, as currently designed, are not effectively achieving the government’s objective of protecting the poor as they are either poorly targeted or too small in the coverage or in the size of the cash transfer. In addition, they are not sufficiently focused on promoting human capital development of the next generation as they are skewed toward the elderly.

The main component of the project will finance grants to be provided to poor pregnant and lactating women and the mothers of poor children, in a form of Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) for up to 15,000 households by 2015. Human capital development will be promoted through health programs aimed at improving timely utilization of maternal and child health care services and education programs designed to reduce school repetition rates and increase secondary school enrollment and graduation. All cash-transfer recipients are expected to get regular health check-ups, participate in nutrition education and take nutrition supplements, and attend school regularly in order to receive monthly payments that will vary according to the age of the beneficiary and the region of residence.

The program is expected to substantially increase enrollment rates, especially in secondary schools. Expected health outcomes include improved maternal health due to regular prenatal checkups and an increase in the number of children who are immunized against preventable diseases.

In order to maximize the effectiveness of the CCT Program, the project also aims to improve and expand the supply of education and health services in order to meet additional demand generated through the cash transfer program. Beneficiaries will receive fee waivers from public schools, free school meals, and free health care services at public facilities through government subsidies.

The project will also strengthen the institutional capacity of the Ministry of Social Affairs and Public Housing to more effectively and efficiently plan, implement, monitor, and evaluate targeted non-contributory social protection programs, such as CCT.

“The program targets children in poor families, and aims to induce a behavioral change by involving the parents through two key co-responsibilities: children’s regular health check-ups and school attendance. This will reduce poverty and vulnerability of the next generation” said Donna Harris, IDB social protection specialist and the project team leader.

The IDB loan of $15 million is for a term of 20 years, with an interest rate based on Libor. It has a grace period of 5 years, and a disbursement period of 5 years
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Friday, December 2, 2011

Suriname.Social Protection Support Program

The program will support the consolidation of existing cash transfer programs and their reconfiguration into a CCT program;strengthen the institutional capacity of MOSAPH to plan, implement, monitor, and evaluate targeted non-contributory social protection programs; and strengthen locally the supply of social services (health and education) in order to meet additional demand.

Component 1: This component will strengthen non contributory social protection programs to improve the effectiveness of spending on those programs. generated through the CCT.  This component will finance: institutional strengthening; technical assistance to implement the CCT; development of a MIS that will incorporate all the CCT modules; dissemination and public awareness activities; limited amount of rehabilitation of MOSAPH central and district offices; development and implementation of mechanisms for determination of disability consistent with international standards and practice; and an assessment of MOSAPH social care services and development of an action plan for strengthening social care services.

Component II: will finance the grants to be provided to beneficiaries as part of the CCT.Component III: Strengthening Health and Education Services to reduce supply-side constraints that can hinder compliance with program conditions.Component IV: Monitoring and Evaluation
IDB.SU-L1013:Social Protection Support Program

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Thursday, December 1, 2011

Paraguay.Technical Inputs for the Implementation Longitudinal Social Protection Survey

This TC will support the implementation of the Longitudinal Social Protection Survey.

IDB. PR-T1126 : Technical Inputs for the Implementation Longitudinal Social Protection Surveyh