Transcript Document

Social Transfers:
a southern African perspective
Nicholas Freeland
2009 FANRPAN Regional Policy Dialogue
Maputo, 31 Aug – 4 Sept 2009
What is RHVP?
• A regional programme for southern Africa
funded by DFID (now UKaid) and AusAID
• Phase 1 ran from July-05 to Sept-08; Phase 2
will run to Sept-10
• Seeks to address the prevalence of chronic
vulnerability in the SADC region
• Promotes a shift from emergency relief
(primarily food aid) to long-term,
institutionalised social protection
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3 interlinked components
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Social protection:
shifting the development paradigm
• Traditional (the poor are the problem):
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•
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Focus development on economic growth
Wait for economic growth to reduce poverty
Residual interim safety nets
Donor (expensive) emergency assistance where necessary
… IS NOT WORKING (in Africa)
• Emerging (the poor are the solution):
•
•
•
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Provide comprehensive social protection
Social protection will help to generate economic growth
This will reduce poverty and the cost of social protection
Reduced emergency assistance, freeing donor resources
The case for social transfers: multi-dimensional
impacts
Busting the myths about social transfers
• Cash is not wasted on “anti-social behaviour”
• Cash transfers do not create laziness and
dependency
• Cash transfers do not fuel inflation (in
functioning markets)
• Cash transfers are affordable, even in LICs
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Virtuous spiral
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Lesson 1: Not a new concept in Africa
• Culture of sharing
• Long tradition of informal systems at community & family
level
• But many informal systems have eroded
• Migration
• HIV/AIDS
• Some have survived, even thrived
• Burial Societies
• And a few have been revived
• Chiefs’ fields initiative, Lesotho
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Lesson 2: Donor support is not a pre-requisite
(and may even be an impediment!)
• Political will and commitment are pre-requisites for
comprehensive and durable social transfer schemes
• Where social protection initiatives are home grown and
are driven by national stakeholders, they are much more
likely to be adopted and sustained
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Lesson 3: Evidence, evidence & more evidence
(a donor preoccupation?)
• More justification:
• Poverty reduction no longer seems to be sufficient
• Now need to prove broader impacts – economic
growth, agricultural productivity, etc
• Risk that we are moving away from the core
objectives
• Could a broader definition be counterproductive?
• More evidence:
• Double standards - why Africa?
• The macro evidence “Catch 22”
• In future: evidence through implementation not
experimentation
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Lesson 4: Too many pilots
(not enough on-budget Govt programmes)
Ownership
Pilot or
experiment?
What’s
wrong
with
pilots ?
Limited
coverage
& impact
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Provide
limited
evidence on
scaling-up
Open to
political
influence
NOT social
protection
Lesson 5: Favour categorical targeting
(esp where >50% of population are poor)
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Lesson 6: Social protection is affordable
(even in LICs)
• ILO, Africa (2005)
• $18 to all >65 and disabled - 0.3% to 1.0% of GDP
• $9 to all <14 - 2.0% to 6.5% of GDP
• What is the current spend on chronic poverty and
emergency assistance? How effective is it?
• Base programmes on affordability not need
• Target for exclusion, not for inclusion
• Think progressively – have a roadmap
• Innovative ways of increasing revenue
• Balance cost against benefits – view as an economic as
well as social investment
• What is the cost of not doing anything?
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Proportion of vulnerable people protected by
the input subsidy
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