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Social Protection and Children

Social Protection and Children. Enrique Delamonica UNICEF Mexico, August 2012. Overview and objectives. Why children and social protection? Child Sensitive Social Protection Limits of CCTs Universal, integrated systems Progressive realization. Th ree Facts.

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Social Protection and Children

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  1. Social Protection and Children Enrique Delamonica UNICEF Mexico, August 2012

  2. Overview and objectives • Why children and social protection? • Child Sensitive Social Protection • Limits of CCTs • Universal, integrated systems • Progressive realization

  3. Three Facts • Convention of the Rights of Child • CCTs in most countries • Needs

  4. CRC Article 26 “States Parties shall recognize for every child the right to benefit from social security, including social insurance, and shall take the necessary measures to achieve the full realization of this right in accordance with their national law.”

  5. Coverage of CCTs(% of monetary poor) Region-wide about half of the monetary poor population is covered

  6. Monetary and Child Poverty Total ChildPoverty: 45% Source: CEPAL/UNICEF, 2010

  7. Income poor A C B Combining different groups of people who could be eligible for social protection Vulnerable TO.. Excluded Non-Income poor (rights) But would this be all? .

  8. What about the… • Elderly • Unemployed • Widow(er)s • Sick • Orphans • And those who could eventually fall in these categories? • Universal, integrated systems of protection

  9. Child Sensitive Social Protection • Social Transfers • Cash or in kind support • Social Insurance/Access to services • Social Support & Care Services • Policies, legislation and regulations

  10. Cash transfers and children • Birth grants • Universal child allowances • Disability benefits • Maternal or parental benefits • Sick leave • Housing allowances • Unemployment benefits • Support children left behind by migrant parents (e.g. within pensions system for grandparents)

  11. Non cash transfers for children • Fee waivers for health or education services • Interventions to prevent adolescents from dropping out of school  NINIs • School feeding programmes • Therapeutic food and other high impact health/nutrition interventions • Food vouchers, food aid or other in-kind livelihood supports

  12. Scenarios of childpovertyreductionthroughnutritioninterventions Child poverty if under-nutrition at 5% Child poverty if under-nutrition cut in half Child poverty

  13. Other social protection policies affecting children • Social care services (e.g. family and community support) • Early childhood development programmes • Programmes for children with special needs • Inheritance rights • Anti-discrimination legislation • Breastfeeding and parental leave laws

  14. Maternity and Paternity Leave Breastfeeding: 1 to 2 hours for 6 to 12 months But all of this only applies to formal work!

  15. Some limitations of CCTs • Cash in exchange for behavioral change • Targeted, not universal • May imply punishing the needy (punitive) • Low efficiency (e.g. high monitoring costs) • May perpetuate gender stereotypes • Unintended consequences (e.g. discrimination, clientelism) • Ethical issues (e.g. paternalistic/top down)

  16. Methodological issues in assessing conditional cash transfers • Reduce poverty now or in the future? • Income or condition? (No really good and systematic evidence that conditionality works) • Condition or (previous) investment in services? • Even if they “work” in a carefully selected trial experiment, would they work in a different context? • Are we sure people did not want to satisfy condition?

  17. Progressive realization in practice Means testing, targeting and conditionalities: Partial and transitory

  18. Integrated systems • Progressive realization: • Start with C who is completely excluded • Then E for political buy-in? • Or A who is also as needy as C?

  19. Examples of UNICEF and Social Protection • Integrated ECD respecting indigenous values and traditions (●) • Integrated packages of education, health and WASH at municipal level (●) • Single database of beneficiaries (●) • Other integrated approaches (●) • Assessment of Social Safety Nets (●)

  20. Conclusions • Social protection well beyond CCTs or “economic insurance” • Broad and integrated view of social protection (shared by ILO, UNDP, others) • Menu of UNICEF experiences • Crucial piece of a strategy to eliminate child poverty in one generation

  21. Thank you!

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