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Miguel Niño-Zarazúa Armando Barrientos David Hulme Sam Hickey Presented By: Rose Moore
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Located at the University of Manchester in the U.K. Established to create and share knowledge to end poverty and to shape policies that deliver real gain for people in poverty. Authors: Niño-Zarazúa—Research Fellow Barrientos—Research Director Hulme—Executive Director Hickey—Associate Director Brooks World Poverty Institute
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“Public actions taken in response to levels of vulnerability, risks, and deprivation, which are deemed socially unacceptable within a given polity and society.” Three categories: social insurance labor market regulation social assistance Social Protection
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Based on age Grants are to ensure children’s schooling, improve health care, and re-allocate productive resources within households. Effective because of: Social structures Availability of services Relies on income transfers in the form of social pensions and child support grants The Southern African Model
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Pension Plans: Non-contributory Regular and Unconditional payments Reaches 2 million beneficiaries, which represents 80% of 60+ population Child Support Grants: Introduced in 1998 Covers children until 18 Enacted to correct limitations of the age grants Southern Africa cont’d
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Previously emergency assistance, such as food and humanitarian aid, was the predominant form of protection What changed? Sustained economic growth Debt relief Budget support Natural resources revenues. Two shifts: cash-aid and social protection The Middle Africa Model
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Cash-aid Cash transfers to very poor households with no work capacity. Mostly funded by donors, not the governments. Many programs require the beneficiary to apply for aid and have a doctor certify disability or need. Some include service provisions: conditioned on school attendance, health check-ups, and nutrition training. Middle Africa Cont’d
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Donor v. government argument Southern Africa: Urbanization Pro-poor political parties High level of income inequality Middle Africa: Many pilot programs More rural population Who drives social protection?
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Financial sustainability Fears of rapid escalation World financial crisis Institutional capacity for implementation and delivery Community participation Mixture of providers Challenges
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Significant expansion in South Africa New wave of social programs in Middle Africa Global financial crisis threatens social protection programs Conclusion
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