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PROMOTING AN INTEGRATED SOCIAL PROTECTION FRAMEWORK FOR THE CARIBBEAN

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Title: PROMOTING AN INTEGRATED SOCIAL PROTECTION FRAMEWORK FOR THE CARIBBEAN


1
PROMOTING AN INTEGRATED SOCIAL PROTECTION
FRAMEWORK FOR THE CARIBBEAN
  • Caribbean Development Bank in conjunction with
    the Department for International Development, the
    European Commission for Barbados and the Eastern
    Caribbean, the United Nations Development
    Programme and the World Bank

2
Social Protection what does it encompass?
  • All interventions from public, private, voluntary
    organisation and social networks, to support
    communities, households, and individuals, in
    their efforts to prevent, manage, and overcome a
    defined set of risks and vulnerabilities.
  • Usually in response to levels of vulnerability,
    risk and deprivation deemed unacceptable. It is
    welfare and relief, but more given the
    emphasis on liberating human potential and
    promoting equality of opportunity. While it
    incorporates safety nets, it also recognizes
    the importance of acting as a spring board and
    adopting a longer term developmental approach
    (investment in capacity building).
  • It is an aspect of social policy and should be an
    integral part of countrys development policy

3
Social Protection Instruments
  • Social security systems (social insurance),
    transfer programmes (Old age pension, necessitous
    grants), and other forms of social assistance,
    emergency response initiatives, labor and
    employment standards and even informal strategies
    to manage risk.
  • Employment programmes, skills training and
    capacity building programmes, etc.

4
Rationale for a SP Agenda
  • The populations of the region face high levels of
    risks and vulnerabilities, linked to individual,
    structural and other factors which adversely
    impact them and can force them into poverty or
    keep them mired in poverty.
  • Sustained vulnerability also forces households to
    engage in behaviour dysfunctional to their long
    term interest perpetuating the cycle of
    deprivation and poverty.
  • Developments are in progress that will heighten
    vulnerability and increase the demand for SP

5
Rationale for a SP Agenda
  • Social protection instruments exist, but in many
    areas these are not sufficiently strong or
    effective in protecting households and
    communities from exposure to natural, economic,
    and social hazards.
  • General Issues
  • Gaps in the coverage of risks and vulnerabilities
  • Appropriateness and scope of interventions
  • Targetting of beneficiaries
  • Overlapping programmes
  • Quality of service and accessibility
  • Effectiveness of instruments
  • Administrative, planning and implementation
    capacity
  • Programme design

6
Rationale for a SP Agenda
  • Programme specific concerns
  • Social Insurance
  • Social Assistance
  • Transfer/Welfare Programmes
  • Labour Market Programmes
  • Community based Investment Funds
  • National Health Insurance

7
A Regional SP Agenda Why?
  • Need to be more systematic and proactive about
    protecting against risks and overcoming the
    vulnerabilities
  • A social protection framework is needed to
  • reduce the adverse impact of vulnerability on
    growth and development strategies
  • protect the living standards of households and
    communities, and promote their capacity to invest
    in their future
  • engage international donors in a partnership to
    ensure aid effectiveness in social protection

8
A Regional SP Agenda Why?
  • The shared commonality in risks and
    vulnerabilities across the Region, and the common
    issues and concerns which have been identified
    suggest that are economies and synergies to be
    had from adopting a regional approach to social
    protection
  • Similarity in main SP instruments deployed across
    countries

9
A Regional SP Agenda consisting of what?
  • An integrated, effective, and comprehensive
    social protection system to act both as a safety
    net and a springboard
  • Better targetting to reduce costs and increase
    the efficiency of delivery of services.
  • More effective collaboration and better
    co-ordination amongst institutions in social
    protection interventions within countries and
    across the Region.
  • Grounded in the use of data, research and
    evidence to facilitate design of programmes,
    monitoring and evaluation
  • Donor partnerships in support of a regionally
    determined SP reform agenda (to stem the wasteful
    duplication of progammes, and to exploit
    synergies by drawing on the expertise of the
    different agencies and to maximise the use of
    donor resources

10
Seven Social Protection Priorities
  • Improve planning on SP issues
  • Establish a mechanism in each country for
    sector-wide SP planning
  • Link social protection plans to country poverty
    reduction strategy
  • Reform social insurance
  • Focus on achieving long-term financial
    sustainability,
  • And expanding coverage to informal and poor
    workers
  • Rationalize and strengthen social assistance
  • Better targeting and delivery mechanisms
    reduce overlaps and administrative costs focus
    on human capital development a hand-up rather
    than hand-out prepare for crises (including
    instituting counter-cyclical social spending
    patterns)

11
Seven Social Protection Priorities
  • Improve ex-ante disaster management
  • Develop regional disaster management fund
    (share risk across countries)
  • Improve building codes
  • Review labor market policies
  • Support competitiveness, improve safety
    standards, eliminate child labor, etc.
  • Reform active labor market programs
  • Facilitate informal risk management
  • Reduce the cost of sending/receiving remittances
  • Improve data collection, monitoring and
    evaluation

12
Required Action/Proposed Next Steps
  • Ministers to convene country level Cabinet
    meetings to share the SP agenda
  • Regional line Ministries meeting held to discuss
    a regional approach in support of a sustainable
    national social protection strategy
  • Promote the integration of SP reform process in
    social policy formulation and implementation in
    the OECS at both national and regional level
  • Pilot the integrated SP and Social and Human
    Development process in 1 or 2 countries
    including
  • Rationalise/consolidate mechanisms for social
    protection
  • Strengthen public sector capacity
  • Promote efficient/effective targeting of social
    protection instruments and
  • Systematise social protection interventions
    through the labour market social safety nets,
    pensions.

13
Required Action/Proposed Next Steps
  • Accelerating coordination of social statistical
    capability to support data analysis and
    evidence-based policy formulation (through SPARC)
  • Putting social protection on the Regions
    development agenda, helping to embed it within
    the CSME agenda and advocating for its
    integration into key country level processes such
    as poverty reduction strategy papers and the
    institutionalization of recent social policy
    frameworks
  • Facilitate the involvement of NGOs and Community
    Based Organisations through the institutionalised
    Council on Civil Society in effect Forward
    Together July 11, 2005.
  • Ensuring that a regional approach to social
    protection reform is adopted under the auspices
    of CARICOM (A Caribbean Plan of Action for Social
    Protection).
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