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FORGING A SOCIAL POLICY AGENDA IN THE ESCWA REGION

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Title: FORGING A SOCIAL POLICY AGENDA IN THE ESCWA REGION


1
FORGING A SOCIAL POLICY AGENDA IN THE ESCWA
REGION
UN-ESCWA United Nations Economic and Social Comm
ission for Western Asia
  • Francois Farah
  • Chief, Social Development Division
  • UN-ESCWA

2
Our mandate
  • ESCWA is firmly committed to promoting and
    advocating for a coherent social policy
    understanding. It is expected that such an
    improved understanding would lead to
    institutionalizing, implementing and sustaining
    an integrated social policy in all aspects of
    public policy making and monitoring in the ESCWA
    region.
  • Expected outcome policies that are socially
    equitable, economically productive and
    sustainable
  • Leading to a more balanced, equitable and
    sustained social peace in the region.

3
Knowing why social policy is so important
  • The backbone of the work of UN-ESCWA is based on
    the premise that if social
  • policy is contextualized, well-designed and
    effectively implemented and
  • monitored it can serve as a powerful instrument
    in national development
  • strategies to promote
  • EQUITY
  • SOCIAL INCLUSION
  • SOCIAL JUSTICE
  • SUSTAINABLE LIVELIHOODS
  • ACCOUNTABLE PUBLIC OFFICE AND
  • QUALITY OF LIFE FOR ALL

4
Map showing UN-ESCWA countries
5
Simple map of the Arab region
6
Map of GCC countries
7
Maps showing geographical location of some
selected countries in the presentation
8
What is hindering social development in the
region at the policy level?
  • A Few Questions
  • Is public policy making consensus based,
    relevant, cost-effective and above all delivering
    dividends for all?
  • Are ESCWA countries optimizing their human,
    economic and natural potential?
  • What is the role of civil society in public
    policy making? Is there a public opinion in the
    ESCWA region? How does it express itself and
    through what channels?
  • To what extent has the welfare role of the
    government been hijacked by parties within states
    and what has this done to the social contract
    between citizens and the state? Is there a social
    contract or better still is there a good
    understanding of what it is about?
  • lack of a consolidated social vision at the
    national level

9
What are the region-specific factors on the
ground that have an impact on social policy?
  • The cost of wars and conflict in terms of lost
    lives, displacement and setbacks to development
    continues to be significantly high. Some
    countries face political instability, conflict
    and upheaval on a daily basis ie. Iraq, Palestine
    and Lebanon.
  • Political and economic uncertainty due to
    conflict leads to among other things
  • economic instability
  • poverty
  • social exclusion
  • high unemployment rates (21 in 2004 for
    the region)

10
How Did ESCWA Go About Promoting Social Policy in
the Member Countries?
  • Country Profiles were prepared by national
    experts to
  • track the mode of public and sectoral policy
    making (health, education, environment etc)
  • provide a panorama of the characteristics of the
    social safety nets and financing of social
    welfare programmes
  • Ascertain the coordination mechanisms between the
    state and/among stakeholders
  • Determine the extent of harmonization of social
    and economic concepts in each country
  • Preparing country profiles to describe the social
    situation
  • Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman GCC COUNTRIES
  • Jordan and Egypt DIVERSIFIED ECONOMIES
  • Iraq and Lebanon CONFLICT-RIDDEN
    COUNTRIES

11
Confronting global challenges throughdiversificat
ion GCC countries
  • GCC countries (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar,
    Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates) possess 45
    of proven global oil and 17 of natural gas
    reserves, as well as 25 of crude oil exports.
    They have witnessed a social and economic
    transformation due to their efforts including
  • policy reforms to accelerate non-oil growth
  • state enterprise reform and privatization to
    improve public sector efficiency and governance
    to provide more efficient, equitable distribution
    of services
  • labor market reform and sustainable job
    opportunities for GCC nationals
  • improved social indicators
  • A relatively low external debt
  • donations to poor countries

12
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14
Increases in national spending on the social
sector the case of Oman (million OR)
SOURCE Annual Statistics Abstract, Finance
Ministry, Oman
15
Economic vs social reform case of Jordan and
Egypt
  • Jordan and Egypt are two countries that have,
    since the 1990s undertaken significant political
    and economic reform programmes.
  • Investments have been mainly targeted at economic
    growth rather than streamlining their social
    sectors and policy agendas.
  • Even though they are in the conflict zone they
    have been able to stay out of actual conflict.
    The problems are nevertheless very close to home.

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18
Daily survival vs sustainable social policy
Iraq and Lebanon
  • Geo-political tensions, the Israeli-Palestinian
    conflict, ongoing war in Iraq,
  • the July 2006 war and continuous sectarian
    tension in Lebanon have made
  • policy planners in Iraq and Lebanon too prudent
    to adopt new policies with
  • long-term benefits. Rather their scope of work
    has, by default, had more immediate, high impact,
    social implications.
  • For the most part, relevant line Ministries find
    themselves crippled to implement
  • policy agendas that have been endorsed at all
    levels. What difference would
  • having a coherent policy strategy at hand make if
    the budget has to be
  • reallocated to rebuild homes that have been torn
    down, or to feed displaced
  • families?
  • It is this concern about social costs and the
    centrality of addressing urgent
  • issues related to the daily welfare of citizens
    that defines the way in which
  • policy is shaped and implemented in Iraq and
    Lebanon.

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21
Some commonalities among UN-ESCWA countries
perceptions from the Country Profiles
  • Wide income disparities
  • Countries are slow to move on structural reforms

  • Over reliance on oil exports on the part of
    oil-producing countries
  • Widespread poverty and social exclusion
  • Public expenditure on social sector is still low

  • Inequitable distribution of services
  • High illiteracy rates
  • High unemployment rates
  • Gender imbalance in access to education, health

22
Inequitable access to social services breaking
the cycle of inequity
  • The region is home to 5 of the world population
    but 1 of the worlds renewable fresh water.
  • Inequitable distribution of water per capita
    supply stands at 1/3 of its 1960 level and
    availability is expected to halve over the next
    30 years.
  • Managing water as an economic resource and
    looking into the regional dimension of the water
    challenge is crucial for human welfare, economic
    growth and stability.

23
Spending on the social sector developed vs.
developing countries
World Health Statistics 2006 Demographic and
Socioeconomic Statistics
24
Challenges and Opportunities in implementing
effective policy practice in member countries
  • Lack of consensus on the definition of social
    policy and its underpinnings
  • Difficulty in creating a business climate
    conducive to investment, jobs and sustainable
    growth due to political instability
  • Poor quality of social statistics, weak data
    compilation and dissemination methods
  • Poor management of funds and programmes due to
    weak skills of staff
  • Continued political instability and conflict in
    the region (Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine) leads to
    large allocation of budget to militarization
  • Haphazard budget allocation and poor coordination
    among government institutions and stakeholders in
    the disbursement of funds
  • Weak or over regulated role of civil society
  • Weak role of the media
  • Substitution of role of the state by other groups
    such as fundamentalist organizations and partisan
    groups due to poor social service delivery
  • Poor adoption of international declarations

25
Promoting national-level policy practice
The Case of Bahrain
  • Activities to enhance the policy practice are
    ongoing, so far the following
  • activities have been undertaken in Bahrain since
    the MOU was signed with the
  • Ministry of Social Development in 2005
  • Enhancing a participatory approach to integrated
    social policy National Conference in Bahrain.
  • Institutionalizing integrated social policy
    Establishment of the Social Policy Unit to
    provide periodic reports to the Council of
    Ministers, the Social Affairs Ministry and other
    stakeholders as well as setting up an information
    Database to collect social development related
    information.
  • Capacity building in the design and
    implementation of comprehensive social policy was
    undertaken - Orientation Workshop on Social Policy

26
Orienting stakeholders to achieve policy success
  • The two-day workshop, Orientation to Social
    Policy, held in Manama,
  • Bahrain (December 20-21, 2006) included staff
    members of the Social Policy
  • Unit at the Ministry of Social Development, other
    divisions at the Ministry,
  • government officials and representatives local
    NGOs. The two-day workshop
  • addressed several issues
  • concepts and objectives of social policy
  • designing and implementing social policy
  • social policy analysis
  • the role of the Social Policy Unit at the
    Bahraini Ministry of Social Development
  • delineating the role of various stakeholders in
    the policy process
  • importance of social indicators, monitoring and
    evaluation
  • identifying the coordination mechanisms
  • lobbying and advocacy techniques

27
The timing is right!
  • The interesting feature of regional initiatives
  • Snow ball effect
  • Peer Coordination and Emulation
  • Pick up a good concrete example and make it
    happen
  • Scaling up and institute standards and references

28
THANK YOU Social Development Division ESCWA
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