t ....q. .'1' ,.,...,:...{.3:?:./'f."' -'-;L, I(7 l | l21643 January 2001 '4 I X' ' 79 fi/ 74 gz, ,-- IF ~~ ~47 - The World Bank Group [IL it 1 NIAN I)1\ I L'\i1.N l NI INN ()Z)RI\ I2i 1A, T H E W O R L D B A N K SOCIAL PROTECTION SECTOR STRATEGY FROM SAFETY NET TO SPRINGBOARD The World Bank Washington, D.C Copyright ©) 2001 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / THE WORLD BANK 1818 H Street, N.W Washington, D.C. 20433, USA All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printing January 2001 1 23403 0201 00 The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this book are entirely those of the authors and should not be attributed in any manner to the World Bank, to its affiliated organizations, or to members of its Board of Executive Directors or the countries they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this publication and accepts no responsibility for any consequence of their use. 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HD7252 .S62 2001 362'.00425'091724-dc21 00-066780 CONTENTS v Foreword vii Acknowledgments ix Executive Summary xvi Abbreviations and Acronyms 1 Chapter 1: Social Protection and The World Bank 9 Chapter 2: The New Framework: Social Risk Management 19 Chapter 3: Social Risk Management and The World Bank's Work on Poverty Reduction 23 Chapter 4: Putting Social Risk Management to Work Beyond the Social Protection Sector 29 Chapter 5: Putting Social Risk Management to Work In the Social Protection Sector 39 Chapter 6: Moving Forward: Strategic Directions 49 References ANNEXES 55 Annex 1: World Bank Involvement in Pension Reform 61 Annex 2: Regional Research, Analytical and Advisory Activities, And Knowledge Management 69 Annex 3: Application of the Social Risk Management Matrix to World Regions 71 Annex 4: Summary of Regional Strategies 77 Annex 5: Map of World Regions FOREWORD As the World Bank moves toward a broader understanding of poverty reduction and the relationship of risk to poverty, the standard concepts and interventions of social protection are no longer sufficient. This first sector strategy paper for social protection reflects this view and argues for the development of social protection programs that not only help poor women and men cope with the result of downturns (a safety net), but proactively help them take on higher return activities with less concern about the risks (a springboard). Such an approach provides the opportunity for people to move out of poverty while still providing support for those in most severe need. Implementation of this sector strategy paper's conclusions stances) and (c) more support for risk reduction and miti- would help move the World Bank's analytical and lending gation (for example, by providing school vouchers instead work toward a more holistic, client-driven agenda. of cash handouts). The strategy paper also outlines areas Specifically, the strategic directions would expand the in which its conceptual framework, social risk manage- World Bank's support for informal and market-based ment, may be useful to other sectors and thematic areas of social protection arrangements, resulting in, for example, work. The World Bank's regions have already applied it more community-driven development interventions and successfully in the development of regional and country- an increased role for the private sector in skills building. specific action plans. The strategy would involve refocusing support for public With the adoption of the strategy, the World Bank sector social protection programs toward (a) traditionally stands ready to renew and focus the policy dialogue with underserved groups (for example, by moving from client countries around social protection issues and to reforming formal pension systems to looking more offer support to governments in implementing specific broadly at old-age income security for the lifetime poor) social protection instruments. The implementation of and (b) a more comprehensive reform agenda (for this strategy will strengthen our role as a credible partner example, by addressing safety net reform more clearly in the fight against vulnerability and poverty. within the context of changing labor market circum- Eduardo Doryan Michal Rutkowski Vice President and Head of Network, Sector Manager, Human Development Network Social Protection, Europe and Central Asia Robert Holzmann Ana-Maria Arriagada Director, Sector Manager, Social Protection Social Protection, Latin America and the Caribbean Steen Lau Jorgensen Zafiris Tzannatos Sector Manager, Sector Manager, Social Protection Social Protection, Middle East and North Africa Arvil van Adams Roberto Zagha Sector Manager, Sector Director, Human Development, Sub-Saharan Africa Poverty Reduction and Economic Management, South Asia Alan Ruby Sector Director, Human Development, East Asia and the Pacific ACKNOWLEDGMENTS A team of technical specialists from the social protection sector of the Human Development Network of the World Bank prepared this Sector Strategy under the guidance of the Social Protection Sector Board. The process also involved staff and managers in other sectors of the World Bank Group. Robert Holzmann (Director, Social Protection) and Steen Jorgensen (former Sector Manager, Social Protection and current Director, Social Development) led the work. Christine Allison, Amit Dar, Margaret Grosh, Ian W. Mac Arthur, Anita Schwarz, Lynne Sherburne-Benz, and Paul Siegel, among others, were major contributors. The report benefited from consul- tation with other members of the World Bank Group, a number of external agencies, and an External Advisory Panel consisting of Tarsicio Castaneda, Nieves Confesor, Frank Field, Peter Heller, Michael Lipton, July Moyo, Rani Parker, and Igor Tomes. The paper drew on strategies elaborated by teams responsible for social protection in each of the World Bank's six regions. Jill Armstrong (East Asia and the Pacific), Ana-Maria Arriagada (Latin America and the Caribbean), Trina Haque (Sub- Saharan Africa), Mansoora Rashid and Michal Rutkowski (Eastern Europe and Central Asia), Zafiris Tzannatos and Setarah Razmara (Middle East and North Africa), and Tara Vishwvanath (South Asia) headed up these efforts. Manny Jimenez, formerly of the Development Economics Group. and Michelle Riboud, of the World Bank Institute, made contributions regarding the activities of their respective units on social protection issues. vi; EXEC UT IVE SU M MARY This is the first World Bank Strategy Paper for the social protection sector, one of the World Bank's youngest sectors. The preparation of this paper has offered the opportunity to rethink the concept of social protection, take stock of the World Bank's experience in this area, and develop the strategic thrust of future work. This paper highlights the need to expand the definition of social protection to encompass all public interventions that help individuals, households, and communities to manage risk or that provide support to the critically poor. It also recommends that social protection programs be embedded in an integrated approach to poverty reduction based on a new framework for social risk management. BACKGROUND The World Bank's involvement in social protection-which traditionally consists of labor markets, pensions, social funds, and "safety nets"-began with work on labor markets in the 1970s and the incorporation of safety net components into structural adjustment programs in the 1980s. The debt and economic crises of the 1980s in various parts of the world set the stage for the World Development Report 1990 on poverty, which recognized the importance of safety nets. The concept of social protection gained importance with the collapse of communism, the continuation of economic crises, and the rising share of elderly populations in developing countries. The World Bank espoused a broader view of social protection in its World Development Report 1995, which focused on labor issues, as well as in its groundbreaking 1994 study of aging and pension reform, Averting the Old Age Crisis. Events of the 1990s brought social protection programs to the forefront of the World Bank's work. The fiscal impact of the "cradle-to-grave" social security schemes in the former communist countries was unsustainable, and the World Bank's approach entailed reducing expenditure and targeting transfers to cushion the negative effects of transition on the most vulnerable. The global financial crisis that hit East Asia and then Russia and Brazil in 1997-98 resulted in the implementa- tion of large-scale social protection measures with World Bank assistance. The crises and the downturn in the East Asian "miracle" countries demonstrated that growth and sound macroeconomic policies, while necessary, are insufficient for sustained poverty reduction. Shock-resistant risk management programs, including safety nets, income support systems for the elderly, and well-functioning labor markets with social safeguards are essential to reduce poverty over the long term and to protect gains already made. The World Bank's portfolio in social protection reflects its growing involvement in the sector in response to world condi- tions. Lending in the social protection area has increased more than six-fold since 1994. The lending volume in FY99 was $3.76 billion, 13 percent of the World Bank total (all monetary figures are in US dollars). While the response to the global financial crisis has driven much of the recent increase, annual lending levels for investment operations and noncrisis reform are about 3/4 of a billion and 1 billion dollars, respectively. In FY99, the social protection portfolio consisted of 92 purely social protection loans, with a commitment of $6 billion. Another 183 loans contained significant social protection components, adding $8.9 billion (making an overall portfolio of $14.9 billion). The limited evidence that exists on the quality and effectiveness of the portfolio is generally positive, as measured by the World Bank's Operations Evaluations Department and Quality Assurance Group, although there are emerging signs of strain regarding the quality of portfolio supervision. The World Bank's experience with interventions in each of the main areas of social protection, and with recent adjustment operations induced by financial crisis, has provided some lessons to guide future work. Successful pension reform involves country ownership, flexibility, institution building, adoption of innovations, and sharing of experience. Social funds do well in terms of targeting, impact, sustainability, comparative advantage, and cost, and have shown the importance of commu- nity-driven development in achieving impact. In labor markets, vocational education and training perform best when demand-driven. Job placement activities are generally effective and efficient, while labor supply and demand interventions and enterprise restructuring need careful design. Social safety nets are most effective when established before a crisis hits, and their delivery mechanisms should involve communities. The inclusion of social protection measures in the policy mix supported in adjustment operations has contributed to positive social and economic outcomes. THE CONCEPT OF SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT At the beginning of the new century, it has become clear that, while individual social protection programs can improve people's welfare and reduce poverty, a more holistic approach is needed to make the quantum leaps necessary to lift more poor people in the developing world out of poverty. This Social Protection Strategy Paper reflects this understanding and uses "social risk management," which is consistent with other current approaches to social policy and poverty reduction, as an important conceptual framework for the World Bank's work in this sector. The concept of social risk management asserts that individuals, households, and communities are exposed to multiple risks from different sources, both natural (such as earthquakes, floods, and illness) and manmade (such as unemployment, environmental degradation, and war). Poor people are typically more exposed to risk and have less access to effective risk management instruments than people with greater assets and endowments. This vulnerability makes individuals risk-averse and unwilling or unable to engage in high-risk/return activities. Under these circumstances, poor people have developed elaborate mechanisms of "self-protection" such as asset accumulation in good times, diversification of income sources, and creation of informal family and community "risk-pooling" arrangements. However, these arrangements are often relatively expensive and inefficient, and the coping strategies available once a shock occurs often reduce poor people's human capital (for example, cutting back on meals or pulling children our of school to help generate income). This gives rise to the need for public intervention. Several key concepts are important to an understanding of social risk management. Dealing with risks involves recognizing their sources and economic characteristics, for example, whether they affect individuals in an unrelated manner or simultaneously. The most appropriate combination of risk management strategies (prevention, mitigation, and coping) and arrangements (informal, market-based, and publicly provided or mandated) in any given situation will depend on the type of risk and on the costs and effectiveness of the available instruments. There are also many different sources of risk management instruments (families, communities, nongovernmental organizations [NGOs], market institutions, and govern- ment agencies) and varying levels of demand from different groups (such as formal sector workers and lifetime poor people). All these factors need to be taken into account in designing appropriate risk management strategies for a given population. A clear assessment of a risk management system for any population is possible by examining the available risk management instruments in a matrix of strategies and arrangements-a risk management framework. The World Bank proposes several principles to guide the application of this new framework, including (a) viewing social protection issues in the context of social risk management, (b) looking at all aspects of social protection, (c) achieving a balance among strategies, (d) achieving a balance among arrangements, (e) matching instruments to risks, (f) being prepared for risk, (g) matching supply and demand of risk management instruments, and (h) involving stakeholders in designing and implementing programs. IMPLICATIONS AND STRATEGY Based on the social risk management framework, the World Bank, in collaboration with partners, will work to convince policymakers of the importance of risk management to poverty reduction. The World Bank stands ready to offer support in implementing specific social protection instruments or working with other sectors to improve their programs' effect on risk management. This process will be demand-driven and characterized by joint learning and pilot programs in many areas where global knowledge is still limited. In other areas, the World Bank has well-tested products to offer to interested policy- makers (for example, in pension reform and support for community-driven development through social funds). For yet another set of interventions, the World Bank will either build on others' experience using its comparative advantage in linking up with the overall macropolicies or help to scale up other agencies' pilot efforts. The World Bank will also continue its practice of supporting partners' efforts when its partners possess the comparative advantage (for example, in child labor). The social risk management framework applies to many areas of the World Bank's work beyond the social protection sector. Table 1 summarizes how the World Bank can apply social risk management in other areas. If appropriate policies are 0( .AI 11 I' 1 ( I I\N SI (: R , I RA I LGY in place, then households will be much less vulnerable and will be able to smooth their consumption patterns to a degree. This points toward a need to build greater awareness of the significance of risk reduction for the development process. Furthermore, social risk management can serve as an analytical tool to assess interventions in various sectors. Table 1: Applying Social Risk Management to the World Bank's Work Beyond Social Protection Areas of Strategic Directions for the World Bank World Bank Work Using a Social Risk Management Approach National shocks (economic * Encourage governments to adopt preventive policies including low inflation crises, natural disasters, * Share operational knowledge with disaster management and rural development sectors and civil conflicts) * Support other sectors in developing and piloting appropriate insurance products The financial * Promote inclusion of risk management elements in the design of financial sector sector interventions Rural development * Cooperate in analyzing, piloting, and monitoring innovative ways to manage rural risk Infrastructure * Help relevant sectors to include risk management in analysis of investments * Support development of an integrated human development strategy, emphasizing risk Health, nutrition, management and human capital development population, * Pursue joint work in areas such as health savings and insurance mechanisms, risk reduction through nutrition programs, early childhood development, multi-sectoral HIV management xi Gender issues * Promote legal literacy, encourage equal access to productive resources, and ensure equity in access to education and public services Within the social protection sector itself the risk management framework poses challenges in terms of rethinking existing public sector programs and expanding the range of interventions to provide better support for informal and market-based activities. In the traditional areas of public social protection, reassessment of risk reduction measures (mainly in the area of labor markets) will involve, among other things: * Enhancing pre- and in-service skills building. This will entail reorienting the World Bank's approach to ensure access (especially for women) to skills building and to reflect the increasing importance of market-driven training and the shift from skills to knowledge; piloting new training approaches; and reworking existing projects to fit the new framework. This will be done in partnership with international organizations, especially the International Labor Organization (ILO) and interested bilateral donors. * Eliminating harmful child labor. Removing children from school is a common coping mechanism for poor households, but it endangers the long-term potential of the children. Some areas of child labor are so clearly harmful that a major global effort should focus on their eradication. The World Bank Group (including the International Finance Corporation [IFC]) will build on its existing approach in this area, continuing to follow the lead of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the ILO. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * Assisting governments in making labor markets more equitable and inclusive. Because labor is often poor people's main or only asset, equitable access to safe and well-paid work-"decent work" according to the ILO (1999)-is one of the most important aspects of risk reduction. This is reflected in basic labor standards, including the prohibition of forced labor as well as gender and other forms of discrimination in employment and pay. Private or market-based standards, which range from corporate bench-marking and codes of conduct to voluntary enforcement of industry standards, are a promising complement to public labor standards. The World Bank group is actively pursuing these initiatives with several private sector partners. In terms of risk mitigation, the new strategic directions in the social protection sector will include: E Improving old-age income security. In the area of pension systems for the formal sector, the World Bank has become an established leader in conceptual and operational aspects of reform. This began with its development of a flexible approach to old-age security focusing on a "multipillar" system that many countries throughout the world are successfully imple- menting. While maintaining this approach, the main challenges will be to ensure adequate retirement income for informal sector workers and lifetime poor people, as well as for particularly vulnerable groups such as widows, by strengthening their access to earnings, savings, and other assets. * Providing appropriate unemployment benefits. Many developing countries are rightly questioning the standard insurance approach to mitigating the risk of unemployment. The World Bank proposes to assess carefully the experience of alterna- tive instruments (including their gender impact) and pilot them where there is sufficient interest, in close collaboration with the ILO. Risk coping strategies mainly involve safety nets. Under a social risk management approach, promising avenues relate to interventions that help poor people cope while reducing or mitigating future risks (for example, transfers linked to keeping children in school). Key strategic questions include: * How can the social protection sector sustain its support for safety net design and implementation? Resources will be allocated to support impact evaluations while lending will be as responsive as possible (especially in crisis situations). * What is the appropriate balance in supporting different types of safety net programs? The World Bank, in partnership with the regional development banks and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), will systematically collect and analyze information on program experience to provide the best possible advice to client countries. * How much is enough? While the global financial crisis has emphasized the need for coping programs, care must be taken to ensure that they remain appropriately sized and do not hamper other forms of risk management. Such issues must enter the World Bank's dialogue with the IMF in crisis situations. * How can coping interventions help with risk mitigation and reduction? From the perspective of the social risk management framework, this relates to how assistance can be provided in a way that not only increases current levels of consumption for poor women and men but also enables them to manage risk better and climb out of poverty. As the social protection sector of the World Bank increases its support for government efforts to improve and expand informal risk management mechanisms, it proposes to build on the World Bank's existing experience in the following areas: * Rethinking social funds. Social funds have been successful in supporting communities in more than 50 countries. Considering its increased emphasis on community-driven developmenit, the World Bank will support social funds to (a) expand the menu of eligible projects, (b) target vulnerability in addition to poverty, (c) strengthen means to enhance the flow of services from installed infrastructure, and (d) explore further how to ensure that the voices of women and other marginalized groups are better heard in the selection of priorities. * Encouraging expansion of support for legal reform efforts. This will ensure that these efforts incorporate measures to strengthen and protect poor people's rights to assets, which includes the review of inheritance laws. Women's property rights are of special concern in many contexts. Reforms should also cover civil law, particularly with respect to women's rights in marriage and divorce. SOCIAL PRO IECTIN SC IOR STRAlF(;Y * Supporting community-based coping related to orphans and AIDS victims. Efforts will begin in parts of Sub-Saharan Africa where traditional coping mechanisms have come under unbearable strain and will build on the existing activities to support AIDS coping. Women are particularly vulnerable as they are expected to bear the burden of caring for the sick and may face additional social exclusion compared to men. The World Bank also has much experience in supporting market-based reforms. The challenge will be to incorporate risk management aspects as much as possible into these reforms without distorting the important moves toward fiscal and finan- cial sustainability. Two areas stand out as potentially promising: * Rethinking microfinance within social protection programs. Recent trends in microfinance (toward instruments such as microsavings and microinsurance) and the combination of community-based and market-based arrangements (reinsurance) should provide the chance to develop new models that may meet both financial and social sustainability criteria. * Building financial literacy. Because safe financial assets are key to poor people's ability to mitigate risk, there is a potential role for social protection interventions in bridging the gap between formal financial sector reforms and traditional social protection programs (for example, through the promotion of financial literacy). STRATEGIC DIRECTIONS AND CONCLUSION The final chapter of this paper summarizes strategic directions for the World Bank's work under the new social protection strategy along the following dimensions: regional and country priorities; traditional Bank products; partnerships with other organizations; and resources (financial and human). The paper outlines strategic reorientation in regional work program priorities and countries of emphasis. All regions are proposing to work toward a more holistic approach to risk management, while the detailed work program priorities reflected in the regional sector strategies will depend on the different starting points of the regions, as shown in Table 2. Within regional work programs there will be country priorities. An initial determination of countries of emphasis relies on two dimensions: (a) the importance of the country's risk management issues from a global perspective and the comparative advantage of the World Bank relative to other partners in a country; and (b) the opportunity for World Bank involvement (for ::iii Table 2: The World Bank's Social Protection Priorities by Region Region Strategic Directions Work with other human development sectors to mainstream work on orphans and Sub-Saharan AIDS/HIV management; other sectors to mainstream community-driven development. Africa Integrate pensions and labor work more fully with the rest of social protection. East Asia Help clients to establish sustainable public safety nets, improve functioning of and access and the Pacific to market-based arrangements, and review and support informal safety net arrangements. Europe and Push strongly on second-generation reforms, better integrate social protection subsectors Central Asia and establish more community-based activities as complement to public interventions. Latin America and Integrate social risk management into country dialogue, with country papers helping to the Caribbean identify gaps and need for reform of risk management instruments. Middle East and Improve the functioning of public provisions, the quality of services, and the synergy North Africa between governments and civil society in providing social risk management instruments. South Establish social risk management as an important element of poverty reduction; focus Asia on microfinance, microinsurance and pension reform in terms of operations. EXI CUTIVE SUMMARY example, interest of the government in addressing social protection issues). Of special interest in this context are "engagement" countries, which have great global importance but little interest in World Bank involvement; "high-intensity" countries, which are of global significance and possess great interest; and "regional priority" countries, which are of less global importance but which maintain high interest. The categorization of countries is dynamic and will be updated as situations change. Sub-Saharan Africa (AFR) possesses special challenges. The risks are numerous, severe, and widespread, while the means and instruments for risk management are limited. This indicates a need for a special emphasis on the region. However, three constraints limit the opportunity for the sector: * Issues of vulnerability "compete" with other priorities in the region. * Where management of vulnerabilitv and risks is identified as a priority, nonsocial protection instruments may provide the best means of dealing with the major risks faced by poor people-for example, droughts, civil war, and disease. * The capacity to implement social protection instruments is so low that even if a social protection instrument would work best in an ideal world, the costs of providing social protection in reality may be prohibitively high. In terms of its traditional product lines (country strategy work, analytical and advisory services, portfolio management, knowledge management, lending, information/communication, and evaluation), the World Bank will promote shifts in strategy consistent with the social risk management approach. In some areas it will also undertake specific actions to reorient its product lines to take full advantage of the new approach, as summarized in Table 3. Because this strategy paper will expand the World Bank's involvement in social protection, it will be important for the World Bank to reassess its partnerships with other organizations involved in this sector. In this regard, the paper examines partnerships along three dimensions: content, level of cooperation, and type of partner. The World Bank will continually Table 3: Changes in World Bank Products Based on the New Social Protection Approach Product Shifts in Strategy Required by Social Risk Management Approach-Strategic Directions xiv * Promote risk management as a theme in the overall discussion of poverty reduction Country strategy work * Use tools such as the social protection PRSP Sourcebook to encourage the incorporation of social protection instruments into country strategies Analytical and * Move to more comprehensive and action-oriented sector analyses advisory services * Improve dynamic vulnerability aspects of poverty assessments, especially from a gender perspective * Maintain the sector's portfolio in a quality leadership position Portfolio management and * Evaluate the explosive growth in lending, and rework existing operations against the new risk management benchmark * Expand and maintain reform "primers," which compile current analytical thinking, Knowledge management operational lessons and case studies into an accessible handbook format * Explore new dissemination technologies * Undertake more piloting Lending * Employ adjustment operations in countries still in need of first-generation sector reform and initiate second-generation reforms * Scale up community-driven development based on social funds Information and * Support dissemination of the new risk management and social protection approach. communication including through the World Development Report 2000/1 and the World Bank Institute * Refine evaluation criteria and benchmarks Evaluation * Adjust household surveys to better reflect vulnerability indicators, including intra-household data * Assess the appropriateness of different risk management instruments 8()(AI l'RO I 1C(. IION EL ( I OR S 'RA fAIY review and adjust its interaction with international partners, carefully measuring the costs and benefits of each partnership to allow prioritization and to ensure the selection of those with the highest potential impact on poor people relative to their cost. The proposed sector strategy, if fully implemented, would imply additional resource requirements. Experience from other sectors with similar rapid growth indicates that the social protection sector needs to make management of the existing port- folio its highest priority. In a low- or no-growth resource scenario, the focus will be on maintaining the quality of the portfolio and supporting implementation of the poverty reduction strategy papers in key heavily indebted countries. With an increase in resources, priority would be given to upstream work for country assistance strategies in non-heavily indebted poor countries, using the basic risk management framework and a revised sourcebook from the poverty reduction strategy work. Gradually, there would be expansion into new activities in support of traditional social protection interventions and into the new areas identified in this strategy. In terms of human resources, this implies a greater need for a broad-based social protec- tion staff, with a few highly specialized staff in key implementation areas. The strategy outlined in this paper will help the World Bank to be a credible partner in worldwide social policy. As it recently did in the Global Social Summit in Geneva in June 2000 (a five-year review of the Copenhagen Summit of 1995), and its follow-on activities, in the coming years the World Bank will play a key role in important events and processes including the discussion of social protection at the February 2001 session of the United Nations Commission for Social Development and work on the dissemination and application of the World Development Report 2000/1. The next stage of this strategy, developing partnerships involving a common approach to social policy and poverty reduction, will be the true test of whether there will ever be a day when the World Bank's mission statement becomes a reality: Our dream is a worldfree ofpoverty. xv EXECUTIVE SUMMARY I g I 1 ,* i1 I iI1 AFR Sub-Saharan Africa Region (World Bank) AIDS Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome APEC Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation ASEM Asia-Europe Meeting CAS Country Assistance Strategy (World Bank) CDD Community-Driven Development (World Bank) CDF Comprehensive Development Framework (World Bank) EAP East Asia and Pacific Region (World Bank) ECA Europe and Central Asia Region (World Bank) EU European Union FY Fiscal Year FYR Former Yugoslav Republic GDP Gross Domestic Product HIPC Heavily Indebted Poor Country HIV Human Immunodeficiency Virus HNP Health, Nutrition, and Population (World Bank) ICFTU International Confederation of Free Trade Unions ICT Information and Communications Technology IDA International Development Association IFC International Finance Corporation ILO International Labor Organization IMF International Monetary Fund ISSA International Social Security Association LAC Latin America and Caribbean Region (World Bank) MENA Middle East and North Africa Region (World Bank) NGO NonGovernmental Organization OECD Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development OED Operations Evaluation Department (World Bank) PAYG Pay-As-You-Go PDR People's Democratic Republic (Laos) PROST Pension Reform Options Simulation Toolkit (World Bank) PRSP Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (World Bank, IMF) SAR South Asia Region (World Bank) SIF Social Investment Fund SP Social Protection SRM Social Risk Management UNAIDS Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS UNDP United Nations Development Program UNICEF United Nations International Children's Education Fund WBI World Bank Institute (World Bank) WCL World Confederation of Labor WDR World Development Report (World Bank) WHO World Health Organization SOCIAL PROTECTION SECTOR STRATEGY C H A 0[ n c SOCIAL PROTECTION AND THE WORLD BANK For decades, public policy has been concerned with risk and vulnerability associated with factors such as natural disasters, crop failure, war and violence, illness and injury, old age and death, and job loss and business failure. In the development arena, these topics have received increased attention in recent times for at least three reasons: I Globalization of trade in goods, services, and factors of production and the increased interconnectivity of economies and societies present enormous opportunities for developing countries to prosper. However, globalization also brings new risks and increases the number of possible outcomes. • Technological change helps to accelerate the pace of development, but at the same time it tends to widen the gulf between the "haves" and the "have-nots," both within and among countries. * Increased political openness improves governance by holding those in power more accountable to larger segments of the population. As a result, poor people are finding their voices and asking for help in managing the risks that they face. In this context, the World Bank has developed its first and emerging thinking about poverty reduction sector strategy for social protection. This process has and development. offered it the opportunity to take stock of experience and develop the strategic thrust of future work. It has THE WORLD BANK'S INVOLVEMENT IN also allowed the World Bank to rethink the concept of SOCIAL PROTECTION-A BRIEF HISTORY social protection and embed the analysis, design, and The creation of the modern welfare state, starting implementation of social protection programs in an modestly in a few industrialized countries toward the end integrated poverty reduction framework. of the nineteenth century, received a boost with the "New Social protection is one of the youngest of the World Deal" in the United States in the 1 930s and emerged fully Bank's sector groups, coming together in its current in Organization for Economic Cooperation and configuration only in 1996 with the establishment of the Development (OECD) economies and Eastern Europe Human Development Network. It is also one of the most after World War II.' Many developing countries also dynamic and best performing sectors, with recent high introduced social protection measures such as safety nets growth in lending and analytical work stimulated by the (often, however, with poor coverage for the most vulner- increased emphasis that countries have given to social able) as well as pension schemes, unemployment benefits, issues and by recent financial crises. and health insurance for formal sector workers. This chapter covers the World Bank's involvement in The World Bank's involvement in social protection social protection, which began long before the formal began later and on a limited scale but gained momentum establishment of the sector, and reviews the growth and in the 1980s. The earliest efforts concentrated on labor current status of the sector's work program. It also exam- markets research and policy work (see Horton, Kanbur, ines the main lessons of social protection operations and and Mazumdar 1994) and on social protection compo- programs from current assessments of experience. Based nents of integrated rural development projects. The crises on this analysis, the chapter concludes that it is necessary during the 1980s in Latin America and Africa, and the to adopt a new conceptualization of social protection resulting World Bank-supported structural adjustment that is better aligned with current worldwide realities programs, brought social and human dimensions to the center of the development debate. Many agencies these (presumably) nonproductive transfer programs and expressed concern that macroeconomic stabilization and free up funds for more productive purposes drove the structural adjustment were adversely affecting the welfare World Bank's initial attempts to address social protection of poor people (see United Nations International in the new member countries. This was based on the Children's Education Fund [UNICEF] 1987). As a result, assumption that the transition would be quick, that social protection instruments became a part of the World strong growth (a la East Asia) would take place, and that Bank's highly visible structural adjustment programs, the main point should be to ensure that expenditures on although they remained mainly reactive and palliative in social protection did not strain the budget. Soon, nature. Some programs, such as social funds, later evolved however, the World Bank and the IMF recognized the into free-standing social protection instruments that help importance of targeted transfers to the early losers in the poor people deal with a variety of risks, not only those transition and broader social safety nets to cushion the induced by an adjustment program. effects of transition.2 The experience of the 1980s led to the production of The first half of the 1990s also brought a series of the World Development Report 1990 on poverty, which financial market and policy-induced crises, especially in identified the most critical elements of poverty reduction Latin America and Africa (for example, the peso crisis and as labor-intensive growth, investment in human capital, the debt crisis). Moreover, the falling relative price of the and safety nets for poor people. However, safety nets were main export earners in Africa induced an almost constant still viewed as a "last resort"-reactive instruments dealing crisis that disabled growth prospects in large parts of the with the consequences of poverty but not its underlying continent. By this time, in both regions, the response causes. In this sense, safety net programs represented a from the World Bank and other multilateral agencies cost to be minimized as opposed to an investment for regularly incorporated measures to alleviate both the which impact should be maximized. impact of the crisis and any negative short-term effects of The quest for growth remained paramount to the the adjustment measures. Social funds became prevalent World Bank's poverty reduction strategy of the early throughout much of Latin America, and African countries 1990s, based on the firm notion that more use of the implemented them as well. India, Bangladesh, and several market and better government was the preferred way other Asian countries either expanded or adopted public forward. The idea that growth should be labor-intensive works programs,' and the range of safety net programs was prominent in the debate, but labor market discussions also began to widen in other regions, often with an typically focused on the need to remove distortions and emphasis on food subsidies. promote macropolicies to achieve this objective. This view With a rising number of developing countries passing increasingly came under pressure through factors such as through the demographic transition, support for the elderly the inclusion of new member countries after the collapse became an increasingly important issue in social protection. of communism, repeated crises, and an increasing popula- The World Bank took the lead in rhe field with the produc- tion share of elderly in developing countries. As a result, cion of a seminal book on pension reform, Averting the Old the view of social protection expanded gradually, as Age Crisis (World Bank 1994), which highlighted the need reflected, for example, in the World Development Report to manage pension systems proactively while balancing 1995 on labor issues, which set the stage for the World equity, efficiency, fiscal, and financial objectives. The World Bank's "rediscovery' of labor issues and introduced Bank's program support for pension reform has expanded concepts such as core labor standards and the reduction of substantially since this time, especially in Latin America child labor. and Eastern Europe (see Annex A) i With the collapse of communism and the opening up During the 1990s, social policy in general received a of Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet higher profile, culminating with a 1995 summit in Union in the early 1 990s, social protection programs Copenhagen that firmly identified social policy and social came to the forefront of the World Bank's work in the protection as cornerstones of development (see Box 1.1). region. Both the World Bank and the International Although this represented an advance, there was still rela- Monetary Fund (IMF) found themselves confronted by tively little discussion in Copenhagen about informal or the ultimate (and fiscally unsustainable) welfare states, market-based solutions. The model that had evolved in which had assumed all risk management and ensured the more developed world continued to dominate the cradle-to-grave security. The need to reduce spending on 0 C( i AI l'll I I ( I l() 0N , F ( I ()R 8 T R,\ A1 I (. Y debate, even though it was under increasing pressure even protection interventions constituted an integral part of in the richest countries. the overall adjustment programs, as in the case of the Most recently, the global financial crisis that first hit emergency support operations for the Republic of Korea East Asia and then Russia and Brazil in 1997-1998 also (World Bank 1998, 2000c). helped establish social protection as one of the critical The Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired elements of a sustainable poverty reduction strategy. The Immune Deficiency Symndrome (HIV/AIDS) pandemic is social and poverty implications of the shock and the also causing development planners to broaden their ramifications of the proposed corrective measures were thinking on social protection. In addition to the obvious central and fundamental concerns in the World Bank's human tragedy, HIV/AIDS is placing a tremendous strain quick response to the East Asia crisis. As a result, social on the economic and social fabric of the most affected societies, principally through the decimation of the labor supply. It creates additional burdens for women, who are BOX 1 .1| frequently expected to sacrifice their educational and economic aspirations to care for the sick and dying, may T H E COPE N HAG E N S O C IA L be more frequently ostracized and even forced to leave the SUMMIT AND 20/20 INITIATIVE community when infected, and in some cases may lose their property when their husbands and other male rela- The Global Social Summit in Copenhagen in 1995 put tives have died. social policy at the center of the development debate. These recent crises have shown that growth and good The final Copenhagen Declaration and the Program of macroeconomic policies, while of great importance, are Action highlighted a number of areas related to social not sufficient for sustained poverty reduction. Shock- protection. Of the ten "commitments" called for in resistant risk management programs, including safety the Program of Action, Commitment 2 called for the nets, income support systems for the elderly, and well- formulation or strengthening of national policies and functioning labor markets with social safeguards, are strategies to reduce inequalities and eradicate absolute essential to reduce poverty over the long term and protect poverty by a target date to be set by each country. At previous gains. They are necessary for humanitarian the national level, governments were to develop and reasons and in light of sound economic rationale-the implement policies "to ensure that all people have avoidance of long-term poverty can reduce the need for adequate economic and social protection during social assistance. The crises have also demonstrated the unemployment, ill health, maternity, child-rearing, importance of empowering citizens by encouraging broad widowhood, disability, and old age." Commitment 4 participation in decisionmaking. fostered social integration "based on the promotion and protection of all human rights, as well as non- THE SOCIAL PROTECTION PORTFOLIO discrimination, tolerance, respect for diversity, equality AND ANALYTICAL WORK of opportunity, solidarity, security, and participation of These external events have been a factor in the seven-fold all people." This included ensuring "the protection and increase in the World Bank's lending in the social protec- full integration into the economy and society of disad- tion area since 1992. The lending volume in FY99 was vantaged and vulnerable groups and persons." US$3.76 billion (13 percent of total World Bank lending), The 20/20 Initiative was part of the Copenhagen up from about US$0.3-0.7 billion in the FY92-FY95 Conference and has since gained a life of its own, most period (Chart 1.1). Policy-based lending has increased (for recently with an October 1998 follow-up meeting in example, in the large loans to Russia, Korea, Thailand, Hanoi. The goals of this initiative are to ensure that Indonesia, Argentina, and Brazil), and in FY99, more than countries and donors each allocate at least 20 percent 80 percent of social protection lending was in the form of of their spending or aid flows to social sectors, with 20 adjustment loans. While the response to the global finan- percent of this amount directed to primary services. cial crisis has driven much of the recent rise in lending, the While social protection interventions were not origi- annual lending level for investment operations is about 1/2 nally present in the 20/20 framework, they are now to 3/4 of a billion dollars, and the World Bank has lent entering into the discussions. another billion dollars annually in the last three to four years (with wide fluctuations, depending on the size of the CHAPTER ONE * SOCIAL PROTECTION AND THE WORLD BANK CHART 1.1: WORLD BANK LENDING Operations Evaluations Department (OED) has provided FOR SOCIAL PROTECTION (FY92-FY99) relatively scarce analysis on its quality or effectiveness. 4000 The available evidence indicates that, despite growth in the volume of work without corresponding growth in 3000; | resources, the sector still maintains better than average .2 quality on the measures commonly used in the World 2000 Bank, although some strains are beginning to show: 1000 * The FY99 Annual Portfolio Performance Review found that 14 percent of social protection projects were "at 500 risk" of not meeting their objectives (as measured by o0 the Quality Assurance Group), slightly better than the FY92 FY93 FY94 FY95 FY96 FY97 FY98 FY99 World Bank-wide average of 19 percent. This indicator Year improved slightly in FY00, dropping to 13 percent. Source: World Bank data * Within the social protection sector, labor market and employment projects generally have the highest levels of "at-risk" rankings, but commitments "at risk" have countries included in any given year) for noncrisis social been concentrated in adjustment operations, mainly protection reform. loans made to high-risk countries (primarily Russia). By In FY99, the social protection portfolio contained the end of FY00, the situation had improved consider- 92 loans financing only social protection activities, with ably. Only 5 percent of social protection commitments a commitment of US$6 billion. Most of these lending are currently considered at risk. operations are in Eastern Europe and Central Asia (ECA), * Despite the increase in lending, the social protection Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). sector maintained its high "quality-at-entry" ratings in Approximately half of the loans are for social funds and both 1998 and 1999, with 88 percent and 90 percent social assistance projects; one-fifth for labor market satisfactory or better ratings, respectively, slightly above projects; and the balance for pensions, social insurance, the overall World Bank average. and adjustment operations. An additional 183 loans * The "quality of supervision" remains an area where contained social protection components, adding US$8.9 social protection appears to be below World Bank billion in commitments (making an overall social averages, although 25 percent of social protection protection portfolio of USS 14.9 billion). In this broader projects were rated as highly satisfactory on average definition of the portfolio, almost two-thirds of for the last two years, compared to a World Bank commitments (in dollar terms) are for labor market and average of 14 percent. employment activities, 20 percent for pensions and * There is also some concern that the issue of gender social insurance, and the balance for social assistance discrimination in labor markets, property rights, access and social funds. to productive resources, and income support has not The lion's share of FY91-99 lending went to Latin yet been fully addressed in many contexts. America and the Caribbean (US$5.46 billion, or 36 percent of the total), East Asia and the Pacific (EAP) Although the Operations Evaluation Department has (US$3.75 billion, or 25 percent), and Europe and Central not done an overall evaluation of the social protection Asia (US$2.87 billion, or 19 percent). South Asia, and the portfolio, it has reviewed the World Bank's Middle East and North Africa (MENA) had the smallest Implementation Completion Reports for a number of amounts of lending, with 15 and 36 projects approved, social protection projects. In general, social protection respectively, amounting to US$880.7 million and projects had an 86 percent satisfactory rating in 1999, but US$984.6 million. Africa had the largest number of sustainability was deemed to be uncertain in more than projects in the FY91-99 period (95 in total), with a 70 percent of the projects. This appears to be based lending volume of US$1.27 billion. mainly on an assumption that the social fund agencies Since the social protection portfolio is relatively young, will not be maintained beyond the lifetime of the and a large portion of its lending is in the form of compo- projects. However, independent impact evaluations have nents in projects from other sectors, the World Bank's indicated that projects financed by the agencies are SOCIAI PROTECTION O(.CTOR STRATE(;Y sustainable and have higher usage rates than similar The reform of public pension systems has been an investments (Jorgensen and Van Domelen 2000; important area of activity for the social protection sector. Rawlings, Sherburne-Benz, and Van Domelen 2000). The World Bank has been formally involved in 70 tech- The sector's analytical work has grown in parallel with nical assistance, project, and reform loans in 36 countries and, in some cases, in advance of the rapid rise in the during the past 15 years (for more details, see Annex A). World Bank's lending. As indicated above, the World While the growing deficit of an unfunded pension Bank has done major analytical work on safety nets scheme is the usual trigger for reform, the need to address (World Bank 1990), pensions (World Bank 1994), and this fiscal problem goes well beyond pension concerns, labor markets (World Bank 1995). More recently, the since pension deficits typically crowd out other (often World Bank has begun to produce a Pension Reform poverty-oriented) social expenditures on, for instance, Primer series-a comprehensive toolkit for policymakers education, health, and social safetv nets. To put the public and World Bank staff on designing and implementing scheme on a financially sustainable base often proves to pension reform-to provide much needed "how-to" be a lengthy and protracted operation. Key ingredients advice to practitioners. The World Bank's safety net/social for success' include: funds and labor markets thematic groups are preparing * Country ownership of the reforms. This involves similar toolkits for their subsectors. More traditional commitment and consensus building among the main World Bank country reports, such as Country Economic groups in the population, information campaigns, cred- Memoranda, Poverty Assessments, Social Sector Reviews, ible fiscal and benefit projections, a political reform Public Expenditure Reviews, and specific sector reports champion, and other elements of the political economy on social protection topics have also been used to provide of reform. advice in this area to the World Bank's client countries * Flexibility in the reform approach. While the World (see Annex B). Bank's proposed multipillar approach to pensions Various World Bank units have been actively involved continues to be a useful benchmark, it is not a blue- in generating and disseminating information related to print, and any reform has to take account of a country's social protection. The Development Economics research starting conditions and preferences. group has done studies on labor market policies and insti- * Institution building. Changing the law is only the first tutions; public sector downsizing; income support step; major support for institution building is necessary programs for the unemployed, the administrative and to make the reform successful and sustainable. For the political economy aspects of pension reform, health, World Bank's operations, this means supplementing pensions and aging; the decentralization of social assis- reform loans with investment and technical assistance tance; child labor; and private transfers. The World Bank operations. Institute runs a number of training events for policy- * Working with the government on innovations. Since makers and practitioners, including an annual two-week there is no fixed recipe for reform, the government and course with Harvard University on pension reform, a core the World Bank must be innovative in order to address course on pensions, global and regional workshops on many of the open problems of pension reform imple- social funds, and a series of training activities for mentation, which include containing administrative personnel from countries in the former Soviet Union. costs, providing annuities, and strengthening informa- tion technology. EMERGING LESSONS OF SOCIAL * Sharing experience. While each country has its own PROTECTION OPERATIONS AND reform approach, the dissemination of cross-country PROGRAMS experience has proven to be a major vehicle to accel- The social protection and poverty reduction groups in the erate reforms and make them successful. To this end, World Bank and other agencies have carried out a the World Bank has an important role to play through number of assessments of experiences with different the activities of the World Bank Institute, the elabora- forms of social protection interventions. A number of tion of Pension Reform Primer series, and cooperation lessons are emerging from the portfolio in each main with other international institutions involved in this social protection area (pensions, social funds, labor area such as the ILO, OECD, Asian Development markets, and social safety nets) and in financial crisis- Bank, and Inter-American Development Bank (IADB). induced adjustment operations. CHAPT I- R ONE SOCIAL P'ROTE CIlON AN D 'I HL WORI D BANK Assessments of social funds have, until recently, been training and education (in cooperation with the educa- mainly desk reviews or partial assessments at best. An tion sector), active labor market policies, small-scale Inter-American Development Bank evaluation of social employment projects, large-scale enterprise restructuring funds did show generally positive results, but it was not projects, and support for labor market legislation reform. based on household data (Goodman and others 1997). Recently, project work started on child labor programs The social protection sector has sponsored two assess- and labor standards, and analytical work began on ments of social funds to provide a more complete picture. activity-oriented labor market reviexvs. The emerging First, there was a review of all beneficiary assessments lessons are as follows: (Owen and Van Domelen 1998), which found that, in m Vocational training and education offer rich experience general, social fund interventions responded well to and lessons (Gill, Fluitman, and Dar 2000), but there is expressed community demands and that there was not yet a benchmark model of modern pre- and in- general satisfaction among stakeholders with the impact service training that the World Bank can credibly offer to of the investments. its client countries.7 The main challenge is to find a new In 1998, the World Bank began the second study, the role for the government, moving it from traditional and Social Funds 2000 Impact Evaluation study, a major multi- all- encompassing provision of vocational training and country evaluation of the impact, targeting, and cost- education to the (co-)financing and supervision of efficiency of social fund interventions coordinated by the private sector-provided and/or -sponsored activities. social protection and poverty reduction groups. The study U The area of active labor market policies has included is using four types of information: household surveys, measures to improve labor supply (for example, facilities surveys, participatory assessments, and administra- through training), labor demand (for example, through tive data. There are six countries in the study-Armenia, wage subsidies), and better balancing of labor supply Bolivia, Honduras, Nicaragua, Peru, and Zambia. The and demand (for example, through job placement preliminary results show evidence in the following areas:? offices and job counseling). A first evaluation of the * Targeting. Social fund interventions are normally experience of World Bank projects (Fretwell, Benus, well targeted, including to people in the poorest and O'Leary 1999) and of developed countries (Dar income decile. and Tzannatos 1 999a) provides a differentiated and * Impact. The interventions generally have a positive, modestly optimistic outlook. While job placement sustainable impact. activities seem to be largely effective and efficient, * Comparative advantage. Social fund-financed measures to improve labor supply or demand work best schools and clinics tend to be better staffed, better if they are small-scale, targeted to specific groups, and equipped, and in better physical shape than other well evaluated and supervised. clinics and schools. U There is no consistent comparison yet available on * Costs. Social funds sometimes have lower costs small-scale employment projects. For large-scale enter- than comparative interventions and sometimes have prise restructuring, scarce evidence suggests the need to higher costs, depending on the "completeness" of include workers in the restructuring process from the investments. the very beginning; to do a careful microeconomic analysis of the existing wage and nonwage compensa- In summary, social funds appear to be a useful, sustain- tion when offering compensation packages; and to able investment in local-level risk management and social link restructuring with the opening of private sector development. However, some areas of debate are how to job opportunities, which in turn requires putting the achieve better integration of the concerns of local govern- reform effort into the broader scope of a country's ment and potential problems resulting from the use of the reform program. social fund mechanism, including bypassing line ministries and the diminishing perceived need for sectoral reform. In the area of social safety nets, no complete evaluation Future research efforts should concentrate on these issues. is yet available. There are some policy assessments on The work of the World Bank in labor markets involves specific issues such as targeting (Grosh 1994) and at a many small projects or small labor market components in more general level (Subbarao and others 1997).8 Existing larger projects (Dar and Tzannatos 1 999b). The main evidence suggests the following main lessons (see also areas of social protection operations are vocational World Bank 2000f): e()( 1A\ '( 1 PRO ( r1 II)N EtH I (R11S I RA\ IF1(;\ * Informal household and community-based mechanisms assistance and social funds have become a widely used still account for much of the safety net function. response to protect poor people. Increasingly throughout 'T'hese mechanisms seemingly work for most but not the 1980s and 1990s, the World Bank has responded to all of the population if the shock is idiosyncratic and changing global, regional, and country circumstances not catastrophic, but they fail under a protracted with analytical, advisory, and lending services in support and severe crisis. of these elements of social protection. Starting with * Public safety net provisions in the form of public works highly fragmented, small-scale, reactive interventions, the and transfer payments in cash or kind work best if World Bank has increased the scope and scale of its social they have been established before the crisis hits. protection support to clicnt countries, culminating in the * The delivery of social safety nets is best done through almost fully-integrated response to the countries affected local communities, which provide control and owner- by the East Asian crisis. ship but still require guidelines, supervision, and We have learned from these experiences that social financial support from the central government. protection projects and programs are needed and in demand by the World Bank's client countries and have, While large-scale structural adjustment operations in by and large. been effective. However, as the world has the past have essentially concentrated on macroeconomic evolved, so has the need for the World Bank to modify its financial and fiscal issues, with social safety nets more of approach to social protection. To date, the increase in an addendum than a loan component, many structural operations has occurred largely within the confines of adjustment loans made during the recent East Asia crisis each of the social protection subsectors: (a) the approach included social protection as a major element (World toward pension reform has expanded to look at markets Bank 1998, 2000c). The Korean Structural Adjustment and informal actions; (b) social funds have increasingly Loans I and II are among the most important and started to examine causes of poverty and not simply the successful examples. These loans focused on financial consequences of structural adjustment; and (c) labor sector reform, enterprise restructuring, and social protec- market interventions have begun to address topics such as tion, linking all three activities in a coherent and core labor standards. With the latest interventions and the consistent policy matrix. Furthermore, the social protec- greater frequency of shocks, this partial, subsector tion part included all main subsectors-social insurance approach is no longer appropriate. (pensions), labor markets, and social safety nets (poverty Our experience has shown the need for a new, inte- issues)-and treated them in a consistent manner. The grated conceptual framework that builds on previous integrated approach of these loans, and their inclusion of knowledge but better reflects the world situation at the all the key social protection areas, helped mitigate the beginning of the 21st century-a situation where risks effect of the crisis on poor people. and opportunities are on the rise, where it is recognized that neither the state nor the market alone will provide WHAT DOES THIS ADD UP TO? the best solution, and where the plight of more than 1 Social protection policies and programs, prevalent in billion poor people poses the question of how to manage developed countries for decades, are finding their way risk better, not merely providing handouts after a shock into developing countries. With considerable regional has occurred. For the World Bank, this implies an even variation, the reform of pension schemes (and other stronger need to incorporate social protection subsectors forms of social insurance) and the (de)regulation of within an overall framework. It also indicates the urgency labor markets are becoming more common. Also, social of integrating social protection with other sectors and themes at the World Bank. NOTFS FROMN CHAP T'ER ON F 1 Transfers (income and in-kind "handouts") to poor people have existed for centuries but, historically, the main providers were religious organizations, private benefactors, and sometimes communities. 2 The IMF program for Poland in 1990 was the first to include a chapter on social safety nets, and World Bank Country Economic Memoranda started to include sections on social programs and labor markets. CHAPTER ONE *SOCIAL PROTE(-TION AND THIE WORLD BANK N EI FS F R (),"I C II AP -I ER ON F CONrfN T I )D 3 Many of these public works programs have been around, however, for a very long time. India's public works programs began in the nineteenth century. In Botswana between 1985 and 1986, 21 percent of the labor force participated in public works, while in Chile this figure was around 13 percent in 1985. 4 For the World Bank's perspective on pension reform, see Holzmann (2000). 5 See Holzmann (2000). 6 The Operations Evaluation Department is currently undertaking an assessment, the Social Funds Evaluation, that will use data from ongoing studies, such as the Social Funds 2000 Impact Evaluation Study, to judge the relevance, efficacy, and efficiency of social funds. It will focus, however, on the criteria of sustainability and institutional development (including social capital), using primary data from case studies in four countries (Jamaica, Malawi, Nicaragua, and Zambia). 7 This is a key strategic priority to help reduce the risk of underemployment or unemployment (Chapter 5). 8 The East Asia crisis and its aftermath have triggered an enhanced interest in the functioning of safety nets during financial crisis, the lessons to be learned, and the impact of World Bank operations. Under the "APEC Finance Social Safety Net Initiative" the Bank is currently participating with the IMF and Inter-American Development Bank in a fact-finding and lesson-learning exercise that covers six countries in Latin America and East Asia. 8 SO)(IALI PR()TE( 110N StE ( I() SlTRATE (Y c~~~~~~ .=z .. 0sz8v 1e!ee'SXS._ THE NEW FRAMEWORK: SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT "The revolutionary idea that defines the boundary between modern times and the past is the mastery of risk: the notion that the future is more than a whim of gods and that men and women are not passive before nature." - Peter L. Bernstein (1996) In preparing a new strategy for the social protection sector, the World Bank needed to formulate a comprehensive yet opera- tional framework linking social protection concepts to the broader agenda of poverty reduction. This chapter describes the new way of looking at social protection based on the concept of social risk management.1 WHY A NEW FRAMEWORK? to socially imposed constraints on their access to Traditionally, social protection has been defined by its productive resources.2 program components, consisting of labor market inter- l It regards social protection interventions as investments ventions (including child labor), social insurance rather than costs. For example, helping poor people (including pensions), and social safety nets (including to maintain their access to basic social services during social funds). This narrow conceptualization, however, shocks fosters their future productive capacity. On the overlooks important aspects of social protection, such as other hand, merely giving them transfers to cope with how these programs overlap and interact, and it provides the shock may not accomplish the same goal. little guidance on how social protection can contribute to U It focuses less on the symptoms and more on the causes effective poverty reduction beyond passive income redis- of poverty by making it possible for poor people to tribution. Furthermore, the traditional framework fails to engage in activities that have higher risks but also address the distribution of risks and resources within the higher returns, and thus to avoid poverty traps. household as well as gender differences in experiences of U It takes account of reality. Less than a quarter of the poverty and vulnerability. world's population has access to formal social protection In its new definition, social protection is seen as public programs, and less than 5 percent can rely on private interventions that assist individuals, households, and assets to manage risk. At the same time, eliminating the communities to manage risk better and that provide poverty gap through public transfers is beyond the fiscal support to the critically poor. The underlying framework capacity of most countries. of social risk management has the following features: * It regards social protection as a springboard, as well KEY CONCEPTS OF THE NEW FRAMEWORK as a safety net, for poor people. While a safety net for The main idea behind social risk management is that all all should exist, the programs should also provide individuals, households, and communities are exposed to poor people with the capacity to climb out of poverty, multiple risks from different sources, whether they are or at least to resume gainful work. The springboard natural (such as earthquakes, floods, and illness) or is particularly important for women, who are subject manmade (such as discriminatory practices, unemploy- ment, environmental degradation, and war). Poor people are more vulnerable than other population tion and redistribution, although there are areas of groups because they are typically more exposed to risk overlap. Dealing with risks involves recognizing the and have little access to appropriate risk management source and economic characteristics of the risks; for instruments. Being poor, and hence vulnerable, makes example, whether they affect individuals in an unrelated individuals very risk-averse, therefore unwilling or unable manner or simultaneously. The most appropriate combi- to engage in high-risk/return activities. Moreover, the nation of risk management arrangements (informal, coping strategies available to them once a shock occurs are market-based, or publicly provided or mandated) and risk often likely ro reduce their human capital (see Box 2.1). management strategies (prevention, mitigation, or In addition ro the gender-neutral consequences of coping) in any given siruation depends on the type of risk poverty, women are also subject to additional socially and on the costs and effectiveness of the available instru- determined constraints on their ability to manage risk and ments. Furthermore, risk management instruments come to escape from poverty. from different suppliers (such as the family, communities, Several key concepts are critical to an understanding of nongovernmental organizations, market institutions, and social risk management. The concept of social risk the government) and need to meet the demands of management differs from the concepts of social protec- different groups (for example, formal sector workers and the lifetime poor). These variables lead to a multitude of possible arrangements. B O X 2.1 Interactions Among Social Risk Management, POTENTIAL CONSEQUENCES OF Social Protection, and Redistribution POOR PEOPLE'S LIMITED ABILITY The concept of social risk management overlaps to some TO MANAGE RISK extent with the concepts of social protection and income redistribution, but each area of public intervention also * A loss of productive assets, which jeopardizes has its own space, as shown graphically in Chart 2. 1. already limited ability to generate income. Determining the boundaries among them depends to * Stunting and permanent setbacks in child develop- some extent on political choices about the scope of public ment resulting from chronic malnutrition, a intervention and the function of social policy in society. consequence of reduced food intake during shocks. Hence, the overlaps and boundaries will differ among * A reduction in lifetime earnings as a result of countries, but common issues remain. child labor, which households employ to raise The darkest shaded area in Chart 2.1 represents issues short-term income. that involve social protection (SP) but are outside the * Limited ability of mothers to properly raise and care scope of redistribution and social risk management for their children due to their increased participation (SRM), such as social inclusion. The medium gray- in informal sector work. shaded area represents the intersection of redistribution * Family breakdown and violence due to consistent stress from severe poverty and shocks. * Studies on the effects of drought in Africa also CHART 2.1: OVERLAPS AND BOUNDARIES suggest that in many rural areas, particularly areas OF SRM, SP, AND REDISTRIBUTION with high male migration, women are the last resort for ensuring the physical survival of the family. Consequently they are often forced to consume or Redri ibution sell their meager capital (land, grain, savings, jewelry, animals, etc.) that they have accumulated slowly over a long period of time. It may take SRM women many years to rebuild their capital, during which time it is likely that they will be subjected to further periods of drought and famine. Source: World Bank 2000f Source: World Bank data ((:I \ I I' R( I10(E II O0 * (: '( III A I I1:(; ' and social protection outside social risk management distribution. On the other hand, not all redistribution is a (such as income support for the critically poor). The form of social protection-redistributive efforts accom- unshaded area of SP signifies social protection as part of plished through a tax-transfer mechanism or through the social risk management. The light-gray-shaded area distributive effects of public goods provision lie outside comprises issues of income redistribution that are part of social protection, for example. social risk management but outside social protection (such as targeted infrastructure investments to prevent or Socialprotection beyond social risk management and mitigate risk). The unshaded area of the redistribution set redistribution: social inclusion. Advocates of policies to corresponds to public measures designed solely to achieve combat social exclusion argue that modern social protec- more equal income distribution (such as progressive tion should not be limited to traditional forms of income income taxation). Finally, the unshaded area of the social support but should include measures to promote social risk management set presents risk management that does cohesion, solidarity, and inclusion. On the one hand, an not involve social protection (such as sound macroeco- income support system for the unemployed may not only nomic policy). These concepts and their policy enhance individual welfare by reducing vulnerability but implications are outlined further below. also help to achieve social stability. On the other hand, social protection may extend well beyond mere financial Social risk management beyond socialprotection. and income-oriented considerations. This broader Many areas of public policy that affect vulnerability and approach would include investments to support informal income variability clearly do not involve social protec- arrangements and upgrade the nonprofit sector, tion. Policymakers often fail to understand fully that strengthen the "social rights" aspects of social policy, and sound macroeconomic policy, stable financial markets, extend the view of social risk management to include the enforcement of property rights, respect for basic labor broad concept of "social capital" (Badelt 1999). rights, and growth-oriented policies are the first and best Promoting social inclusion is an important objective of ingredients for dealing with risk and enhancing welfare. the World Bank.' While the social, cultural, and political This suggests an information-sharing role for social determinants of social inclusion may be beyond the scope protection. The concept of social risk management can of social risk management, it is essential to recognize the also be a powerful analytical instrument to evaluate causes and consequences of social exclusion and to design policy or project measures (for example, structural strategies that address these issues. For example, public adjustment or irrigation schemes) on one aspect of their works programs in a number of African countries may potential poverty reduction impact, namely their risk find it difficult to involve women if they rely on cash management effects (see Chapter 4). payments as opposed to in-kind payments such as food. Similarly, in cultures that limit women's ability to travel, Socialprotection and income redistribution. Income women will not be able to take full advantage of redistribution is an important aspect of social risk economic opportunities or public services located outside management and social protection activities, but unlike their area of residence. traditional social protection or the welfare state, it is not necessarily the primary or only goal. In the social risk Sources of Risks and their Characteristics management framework, income redistribution is present The capacities of individuals, households, and communi- as an equity objective linked to adverse risk and as an ties to handle risk, and the choice of risk management important outcome of good social protection programs. instrument, depend on the characteristics of risks: their The support of the critically poor is a main objective of sources, correlation, frequency, and intensity. The sources social protection. Since financing cash or in-kind transfers of risk may be natural (for example, floods) or the result requires taxes on workers or nonworking wealthy, income of human activity (for example, inflation resulting from redistribution appears as a result. Also, enhancing risk economic policy); risks can be uncorrelated (idiosyncratic) management capacity has high redistributive effects on or correlated among individuals (covariant), over time individuals' welfare, yet it does not require interpersonal (repeated), or with other risks (bunched). Risks can income redistribution to achieve a more equal welfare involve infrequent but severe welfare effects (catastrophic) CHAIPTER TWO T I HE NEW FRANIEWORK SOCIAI RISK MANAGEMENT or frequent but low welfare effects (noncatastrophic). the risks faced by poor people are covariant in nature, Table 2.1 presents main sources of risk and the degree of informal management mechanisms at the family or covariance that can range from purely idiosyncratic community level are typically not very effective. Among (micro), to regionally covariant (meso), to nationwide these risks, at least two are induced by human activity covariant (macro) events. (war and macroeconomic shocks), which need no coping While informal or market-based risk management mechanism if they can be prevented from happening in instruments can often handle idiosyncratic risks, they the first place. Access to market-based interventions, tend to break down when facing highly covariant, macro- such as saving mechanisms or insurance programs, can type risks. In Africa, for example, the main sources of mitigate some of the risks (seasonal price volatility or covariant risks that affect poor people are AIDS, wars and illness). This suggests that different strategies and inter- conflict, seasonal volatility in prices, drought, and macro- ventions are appropriate depending on the nature of the economic shocks. Idiosyncratic risks include illness and risks involved. widowhood or the breakup of the family. Since many of Table 2.1: Main Sources of Risk Micro Meso Macro (Idiosyncratic) (Covariant) Natural Rainfall, landslides, Earthquakes, floods, drought, volcanic eruption strong winds Health Illness, injury, disability Epidemic 12 Lifecycle Birth, old age, death Social Crime, domestic violence Terrorism, gangs Civil strife, war, social upheaval Gender Control over house- Social acceptance Legal discrimination hold resources of gender violence against women Economic Business failure Unemployment Output collapse Balance of payments, Resettlement Financial or currency crisis Harvest failure Technology- or trade- induced terms of trade shocks Political Ethnic discrimination Riots Political default on social programs Coup d'etat Environmental Pollution Deforestation Nuclear disaster Source: Adapted from Holzmann and Jorgensen 1999; Sinha and Lipton 1999; World Bank 2000f. SO( IAL PROT CT ION SI( t OR STRATEG(;Y Social Risk Management Arrangements insurance pools due to premiums while individuals with Over time, different kinds of social risk management high-risk profiles join in order to gain access to payouts. arrangements have evolved. These fall into three main Because these programs typically apply to those in formal categories: (a) informal arrangements, (b) market-based employment, their coverage in developing countries is arrangements, and (c) public arrangements on a large generally low. On the other hand, governments have a scale. Each has relative strengths and limitations. whole array of instruments to help households cope after a shock hits, such as social assistance, subsidies on basic InformalArrangements. These arrangements have goods and services, and public works programs. The existed for a long time and still constitute the main measures a government chooses to implement depend on source of risk management for the majority of the world's its distributive concerns, its fiscal resources, its adminis- population. In the absence of market institutions and trative capacities, and the type of risk involved. public provision of support, individual households respond to risk by protecting themselves through Social Risk Management Strategies informal or personal arrangements. Although they side- Risk management can take place at different moments- step most of the information and coordination problems both before and after the risk occurs. The goal of ex ante that cause market failure, they may not be very effective measures is to prevent the risk from occurring, or, if this in helping the household weather adverse events. cannot be done, to mitigate its effects. Individual efforts, Examples of this kind of arrangement include: the buying such as migration, can prevent risks, but in many cases and selling of real assets (such as cattle, real estate, and they require government support (for example, disaster gold), informal borrowing and lending, crop and field prevention). Mitigating the effects of risk through risk diversification, the use of safer production technologies pooling by definition requires interaction among individ- (such as growing less risky crops), storing goods for future uals, and poor people are typically less able to participate consumption, mutual community support arrangements, in formal and also informal arrangements. This leaves and kinship arrangements through marriage. most poor households with the residual option of coping with the risk once it has occurred. They are normally not Market-BasedArrangements. Individual households well prepared to do this and, therefore, often experience will also take advantage of market-based institutions such irreversible negative effects. For this reason, there is a as money, banks, and insurance companies when they are great deal of public intervention in risk coping. available. However, in view of these instruments' limita- tions due to market failure, their usage will be initially Prevention Strategies. These are strategies implemented restricted but will rise with financial market development. before a risk event occurs. Reducing the probability of an Empirical evidence suggests that the establishment of a adverse risk increases people's expected income and sound banking system and noninflationary policy is reduces income variance, and both of these effects crucial to reducing and managing risk. Because formal improve welfare. Preventive social protection interven- market institutions are reluctant to lend to households tions typically form part of measures designed to reduce without secured earnings, microfinance is also an impor- risks in the labor market, notably the risk of unemploy- tant instrument of social risk management. ment, underemployment, or low wages resulting from inappropriate skills or malfunctioning labor markets. Public Arrangements. Public arrangements for dealing with risk are relatively scarce and have very limited Mitigation Strategies. As with prevention strategies, coverage in the developing world for fiscal and other mitigation strategies aim to address the risk before it reasons. When informal or market-based risk manage- occurs. Whereas preventive strategies reduce the proba- ment arrangements do not exist, break down, or are bility of the risk occurring, mitigation strategies help dysfunctional, the government can provide or mandate individuals reduce the impact of a future risk event (social) insurance programs for risks such as unemploy- through pooling over assets, individuals, and time. For ment, old age, work injury, disability, widowhood, and example, households may "pool" uncorrelated risks sickness. The mandatory participation in a risk pool can through informal and formal insurance mechanisms. circumvent issues of adverse selection, in which individ- While formal insurance instruments profit from a large uals with low-risk profiles avoid participation in pool of participants, which leads to less correlated risks, CIHAI' tIER lWO * THE N EW F R N NiE'ORK: SOC IAI R1SK MANAGE IE NT informal insurance has the advantage of all participants coping to help reduce risk (for instance, by subsidizing having access to almost the same amount of information. education during a crisis). Coping Strategies. These strategies are designed to relieve THE SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT MATRIX the impact of the risk once it has occurred. The main The social risk management framework is a powerful forms of coping consist of individual dis-saving, diagnostic and analytical instrument, since it takes into borrowing, or relying on public or private transfers. The account the different sources and economic characteristics government has an important role to play when individ- of risks, proposes alternative strategies and arrangements uals or households have not saved enough to handle for dealing with risks, and highlights different actors in repeated or catastrophic risks. the supply and demand of risk management instruments. This section develops a social risk management matrix Using Coping, Mitigation, and Risk Reduction and explains guiding principles for its application. Strategies Together. At face value, the best social risk The social risk management matrix shown in Table 2.2 management is to make sure that down-side risks never provides examples of risk management instruments by occur. The next most effective action is risk mitigation, as type of arrangement (informal, market-based, and public) this reduces the negative effects of risks before they actu- and by strategy (risk reduction, mitigation, and coping). ally happen. Risk coping is essentially the residual strategy Filling in each cell of the matrix with existing instruments if everything else has failed. However, since each of these provides a means of examining the status of social risk strategies has both direct and opportunity costs, relying management in a given countrv or subgroup within a entirely on risk reduction or mitigation may not be either country. Comparisons can be made among countries to efficient or feasible. The experience of the formerly assess differences and to determine appropriate and useful centrally planned economies has demonstrated that trying changes in a given country based on opportunity costs to eliminate all risks in advance through quantity plan- and comparative advantage. (See Annex C for application ning, official price setting, and public ownership of of the matrix to world regions.) 14 productive means has serious costs in terms of lower While each cell of the matrix can be filled in most economic growth. countries, the intensity and scope of application are likely At the other extreme, many of the current government to differ and change over time. The poorest countries will interventions in developing countries, particularly for be characterized by a predominance of informal arrange- poor people, concentrate on risk coping. However, a ments and public arrangements concentrated on coping system that concentrates on helping poor people deal with strategies. In contrast, richer countries will apply the a shock once it has occurred runs the risk of keeping them whole set of public arrangements and strategies, and in a poverty trap and perpetuating the vicious cycle of low market-based instruments and strategies geared toward returns, low risktaking, and deep poverty. Moving toward risk mitigation and reduction will grow in importance. a balance among coping, reduction, and mitigation strate- gies has the potential to trigger a virtuous cycle in which GUIDING PRINCIPLES people can undertake activities with higher variability in What does the new social risk management framework returns, but also with higher absolute returns. imply for the World Bank's development work in social The accumulation of assets' (such as land, cattle, and protection? The following principles have been designed financial savings) and policies that discourage disinvest- to guide the World Bank's future work in this area. The ment of a detrimental nature (such as cutting down trees) principles reflect the complexity of the framework and its are of the utmost importance in this regard. Equally relevance to social protection, to the World Bank's work important are efforts to reduce child labor, enhance the in client countries, and to its overarching mission of skills of the labor force, involve the local community in reducing poverty in the developing world. projects, widen access to safe financial assets, and design appropriate unemployment benefits. This does not mean View Social Protection in the that social safety nets should be neglected, since they are Context of Social Risk Management clearly necessary, particularly during periods of natural Managing risk with adequate capacity and appropriate disaster or economic crisis. Rather, it implies that the interventions is an integral aspect of economic develop- World Bank could help structure programs that support ment in general and of poverty reduction in particular. o( A l1. 'RO [ (i ( I()N >11 FI (R S I RP Al E(;Y The concept of social risk management extends well Look at all Aspects of Social Protection beyond the field of social protection, even though social In the past, social protection was often viewed merely as protection is an important and integral part of social risk the direct public provision of risk management instru- management. Approaching social risk management only ments. As a result, the World Bank has done little to try from the perspective of social protection would mean to strengthen the risk management arrangements missing out on many effective and efficient policy actions provided by the market, households, or communities that could be taken outside the sector. This implies taking themselves. In the future, the World Bank must take all of a holistic approach in devising interventions that help these aspects into account in considering the best risk individuals, households, and communities cope with the management strategies to recommend in a client country. risks to which they are exposed. It also makes it necessary Taking a broad view of social protection makes it possible for all the relevant sectors to coordinate in designing the to identify the most appropriate mix of institutions and appropriate interventions. instruments for reducing poverty and supporting Table 2.2: Strategies and Arrangements of Social Risk Management-Examples Arrangements Informal and Strategies Ifra Risk Reduction * Less risky production * In-service training * Public labor standards * Migration * Financial market literacy * Pre-service training * Proper feeding and weaning * Company-based and market- * Labor market policies practices driven labor standards * Child labor interventions * Engaging in hygiene and other * Disability policies disease preventing activities * Good macroeconomic policies *AIDS and other disease 15 prevention * Legislation to remove gender inequalities in property rights, marriage, and access to labor markets Risk Mitigation Portfolio * Multiple jobs * Investment in multiple * Multipillar pension systems * Investment in human, physical, fiancial assets * Asset transfers and real assets * Microfinance * Protection of property rights * Investment in social capital (especially for women) (rituals, reciprocal gift-giving) * Support for extending financial markets to poor people Insurance * Marriage/family * Old-age annuities * Mandated/provided insurance * Community arrangements * Disability, accident, and other for unemployment, old-age, personal insurance disability, survivorship, sick- * Share tenancy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ness, etc. * Shared tenany * Crop, fire, and other damage -Tied labor insurance Risk Coping * Selling of real assets * Selling of financial assets * Transfers/social assistance * Migration * Borrowing from banks * Subsidies * Borrowing from neighbors * Public works * Intra-community transfers/charity * Sending children towork * Dis-saving in human capital CHAPTER TWO v THE NEW FRAM EWORK: SOCIAI. RISK MANAGEM ENT economic development given a country's traditions, market economy in the countries of the former Soviet culture, circumstances, and budget. Also, social protection Union in the 1 990s and the recent financial shock in East strategies must recognize and seek to address the legal, Asia have highlighted the need for solutions tailored to economic, political, social, and cultural factors that deter- the problem at hand. mine gender differences in exposure to risk and in the effectiveness of risk management strategies. Be Prepared for the Risk The economic crisis experienced by Latin America in the Achieve a Balance Among Strategies 1980s and 1990s and the recent East Asia crisis have Historically, risk coping has commanded too much atten- demonstrated that basic social risk management instru- tion; risk mitigation, too little; and risk prevention, even ments should be in place before any crisis hits. Once the less. Though this may be understandable in view of their crisis has occurred, it is very difficult to build political comparative direct costs and benefits, it is likely to be consensus on appropriate policies and establish the neces- inefficient if indirect costs and long-term benefits are sary institutional frameworks to implement them. taken into account. Reaching an economically determined balance among the three strategies should be advanta- Match the Supply and Demand of geous to beneficiaries, particularly poor people, but may Risk Management Instruments be tricky to pull off politically, financially, and conceptu- There are many suppliers of risk management instru- ally. For example, disaster prevention may reduce costs ments (such as individuals, households, communities, over the long term, but it is likely to require a high initial nongovernmental organizations, financial markets, budget outlay. governments at different levels, bilateral donors, and international organizations), and there are distinct differ- Achieve a Balance Among Arrangements ences in demand among different population groups Informal, market-based, and public arrangements for (such as formal, informal urban, and informal rural dealing with risk all have comparative advantages. These workers). Risk can be adequately addressed only if the are determined by who has information and the capacity applied instruments are well matched to the needs of the to handle it, and by the long-term development implica- relevant group. The role of the government in making tions of each arrangement. While in all countries informal this match between supply and demand is complex. Not arrangements existed first, some countries (such as the only should the government provide its own instruments, Soviet Union) relied for a time almost entirely on public but it should also increase the supply and effectiveness of arrangements. In an ideal world with perfectly symmet- instruments from other sources. rical information and complete, well-functioning markets, all risk management arrangements can and should be Involve Stakeholders in Designing market-based (except for the incapacitated). However, in and Implementing Programs the real world, all risk management arrangements will Since the objective of social risk management is to help play important roles that are likely to change over time. people and communities manage risk better, the benefi- ciaries and other stakeholders should ideally be involved Match Instruments to Risks in designing and implementing the interventions. This Individuals, households, and communities are poorly conclusion is supported by evidence from the World equipped to handle certain types of risks, including Bank's implementation experience, whether in incorpo- natural disasters, epidemics, and financial meltdowns. rating poor people's own priorities into the design of These risks require interventions from governments, inter- social funds, opening up the pension reform debate as national institutions, and the world community. In the widely as possible, or consulting with labor market orga- case of less catastrophic risks, informiial and market-based nizationis on public sector restructuring programs. Since arrangements may be appropriate, but public interven- in many societies community and local decisionmaking is tion, such as regulation, mandates, or services, will still be largely in the hands of men, participatory strategies must needed in many instances. However, this kind of public be designed to ensure that women have a voice in the intervention must be designed in accordance with the selection and implementation of strategies. type of risk involved and the environment in which it occurs. The difficult transition from a planned to a SO IAL PROTI EC TION SEC TOR STRA I-EGY NOTES FROM CHAP'FER TWNO 1 See Holzmann and Jorgensen (1999, 2000) for a more comprehensive presentation of the framework. 2 Studies in Africa have estimated that giving women farmers equal access to productive inputs (for example, reducing their yield risk) could increase their productivity by up to 20 percent. Similarly, lowering the risk of girls not gaining employment by increasing their education levels to those of boys could increase the rate of Gross National Product growth by as much as 50 percent in some African countries (World Bank 2000e, Gender Chapter). 3 Examples of these constraints include: restricted control over domestic property and wealth, which means that women have few exit strategies from unhappy or even life-threatening unions; the social acceptance of rape and violence against women; social proscriptions on travel; limita- tions on access to productive resources such as credit, technical and extension services and land. Women's lower political participation also gives them less opportunity to pressure decisionmakers to remove these inequalities. 4 "Our goal must be to reduce these disparities across and within countries, to bring more and more people into the economic mainstream, to promote equitable access to the benefits of development regardless of nationality, race, or gender. This-the challenge of inclusion-is the key development challenge of our time." James D. Wolfensohn, at the World Bank Annual Meetings in Hong Kong, China, September 1997. 5 See World Bank 2000f, Chapter 5. 17 CHAPTFR TWO * THL NEW FRAMEWL\ORK: SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT r1X ##{{g # |||| C H A-;, , l 1 n h r e C :--, IL d- || .7. SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT AND THE WORLD BANK'S WORK ON POVERTY REDUCTION "The position of the rural population is like that of a man standing permanently up to his neck in water, so that even a ripple is sufficient to drown him." - Ancient Chinese Proverb The new framework of social risk management outlined in Chapter 2 has many intellectually attractive and operationally intuitive features. However, its true value depends on whether or not it succeeds in supporting improved policy advice, program design, and implementation capacity in countries. Here the full test is still incomplete, but early applications in preparing the World Bank's regional and country strategy papers' and rethinking several key aspects of the Bank's work in the social protection sector2 have been very encouraging. This chapter and subsequent chapters will highlight some of the strategic conclusions of these applications (indicated by text in italics, preceded by an arrow, -). An equally important test for the new framework relates SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT IN THE to its usefulness and position within the World Bank's WORLD DEVELOPMENT REPORT overarching mission of poverty reduction. At first glance, The World Development Report (WDR) 2000/1 updates the the traditional concept of poverty (insufficient income or poverty focus of the 1980 and 1990 WDRs and, like the consumption and lack of access to basic social services) earlier reports, proposes a strategy for reducing poverty and the main objective of social risk management based on recent development experience and prospects (helping individuals, households, and communities to for the coming decades. The report accepts the now manage risks better) seem barely related. Yet the renewed traditional concept of poverty in terms of income/ worldwide focus on poverty has broadened the view of consumption, education, health, and nutrition. It also poverty and its main causes, fostered a more comprehen- extends the definition to include risk, vulnerability, sive view of the development process, and highlighted the powerlessness, and an inability to make oneself heard. need to address poverty in a more systematic manner. The The WDR 2000/1 stresses the multidimensional character new framework plays an important role in all the main of poverty as a result of complex interactions among initiatives on the development agenda-the World assets, markets, and institutions. It proposes to tackle Development Report, the Comprehensive Development poverty on three fronts by: Framework, Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers, Social * Increasing the capabilities of poor people and creating Principles, and Community-Driven Development-as opportunities for them through complementary actions described in more detail below. to stimulate overall growth, make markets work for them, and build their assets, including addressing deep- seated inequalities in the distribution of endowments such as education. * Empowering poor people by giving them a voice and a to the links between poverty reduction and a population's chance to participate in the decisions that affect them. opportunities, empowerment, and security; and by sector * Providing security for poor people and reducing their in terms of each actor's contribution. The social risk vulnerability to the adverse effects of shocks by management matrix presented in Chapter 2 closely preventing the shocks from happening, by reducing mirrors this second level of analysis by recognizing the the severity of their impact, and/or by helping them importance of multiple actors. to cope. -e Socialprotection can play a role in terms of both analysis The new WDR builds on the recent conceptual work and action in the Comprehensive Development around social risk management (Holzmann and Framework: (a) in terms of the cross-sectoral linkages Jorgensen 1999, 2000) and proposes that risk manage- between security andpoverty reduction (socialprotection ment and the broad range of social protection as a theme), and (b) in terms ofspecific socialprotection instruments should be at the core of the World Bank's interventions and the interplay between actors and instru- work on poverty reduction. The conceptual framework of ments (socialprotection as a sector).4 the report stresses different types of assets-physical, human, and social (Siegel and Alwang 1999, Alwang and Siegel 2000). T'he low monetary returns, volatility, and possible destruction (through, for example, health cata- B 0 X 3 . 1 strophes or natural disasters) of all of these assets make poor people more vulnerable and cause poverty at the EXPENDITURE CHOICES AND individual level. Hence, addressing these risks is critical SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT IN to reducing poverty, and the WDR2000/1 deepens the THE POOREST COUNTRIES analysis presented in Chapter 2 on the links betnveen poverty, risk, and vulnerabilityP. Analysis of direct public social protection spending (in its broadest sense) will be critical to strategic choices 20 As part of implementing the WDR finditngs, the World in the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative. Banks socialprotection sector willpay special attention to: For example, there is little systematic analysis of the (a) highlighting the importance of risk management in scale of public resources spent on various forms of poverty reduiction; (b) improving the measurement of risk social insurance and safety nets in Africa. These and vulnerability; and (c) operationalizing the recommen- include drought relief, nutrition programs, subsidies on dations of the 'security"section ofthe WDR report. fertilizer and microcredit, social pensions, burial assis- tance, social assistance, and food-for-work schemes. RISK MANAGEMENT AND THE All these programs are regarded as reducing the COMPREHENSIVE DEVELOPMENT vulnerability of poor people (regardless of whether or FRAMEWORK not their incidence is pro-poor). Some fiscal and finan- The Comprehensive Development Framework launched cial analysis of formal pension systems has been by World Bank President James Wolfensohn in 1998 initiated in Africa, and individual countries are trying to takes a holistic view of development and poverty reduc- take stock of the scale of their public safety nets (for tion by recommending that countries view development example, Malawi and Zimbabwe). Yet, for the most as a process of societal transformation and, thus, consider part, countries have undertaken substantial outlays for how all sectors can contribute to reducing poverty transfers but do not have long-term strategies to guide (Wolfensohn 1999). Identifying and putting appropriate or prioritize such spending. Future public expenditure policy actions in place in every sector requires govern- analysis should consider expenditure incidence of the ments to collaborate with other national and international whole array of subsidies and transfer programs and actors such as nongovernmental organizations, trade should form part of the core HIPC work program. unions, development banks, and United Nations organi- zations, as governmental actions alone will be insufficient. Source: "Dynamic Risk Management and the Poor: The Comprehensive Development Framework analysis Developing a Social Protection Strategy for Africa,. occurs at two levels: across an entire economy according World Bank 2000. SOC(IAI. PRO ITE (IIION S1 E I OR S t RATEG Y SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT AND SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY PAPERS AND SOCIAL PRINCIPLES Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) operationalize Prompted by the East Asia crisis and the need to address the Comprehensive Development Framework in a way its urgent social dimension, the World Bank/IMF that systematically links diagnosis and public actions to Development Committee asked the World Bank to outcomes in specific country contexts. At the 1999 World develop (in consultation with other institutions) "general Bank/IMF Annual Meetings, member states decided that principles of good practice" in social policies. These debt relief in particular (under the enhanced Heavily principles, presented at the Committee's spring meeting Indebted Poor Countries initiative, HIPC) and conces- in 1999, called for a two-track approach in which the sional assistance in general (through the Poverty United Nations takes the lead role, with active support Reduction and Growth Facility and the International from the World Bank, in further developing the Development Association [IDA]) should be linked to the principles of social policy as part of the international preparation of poverty reduction strategies by client community,'s commitment to follow up on the countries.5 The framework's focus on poverty outcomes Copenhagen Declaration, and the World Bank, in and the link between policies and outcomes (see Box 3.1) collaboration with other partners, continues to distill underpin the multi-actor character of the Poverty lessons of good practice in implementing these principles Reduction Strategy approach and should ensure that debt and to help its member countries draw upon them in relief is an integral part of poverty reduction efforts- the pursuit of their economic and social development In developing their strategy papers, client countries goals (World Bank 1999b). have access to sourcebooks for various sectors prepared by This sector strategy paper reinforces the World Bank's the World Bank. The Social Protection sourcebook work in this area and supports the ten commitments of focuses on the analysis and instruments needed to help the Copenhagen Declaration (see Box 1.1) and the poor people handle key risks. The social risk management follow-up Social Summit known as Geneva 2000. At frarmework should also help the World Bank assess how Geneva, the world community committed itself to a goal effectively countries are providing risk management of halving poverty rates by 2015. To meet this goal, 2- support by looking at their record on reducing vulnera- concerted interventions are needed on all three aspects bility. The outcome indicators included in the of poverty reduction (opportunity, empowerment, and sourcebook target risk and vulnerability, and the interme- security). The social risk management approach and the diate indicators should capture their determinants. objectives of social protection are in line with all the specific commitments made in Copenhagen. They are -I The integration of social risk management into the particularly linked to the goals of poverty eradication Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers callsfor: (a) analysis of (Commitment 2), the promotion of full employment and links between risks and poverty in a gender and country sustainable livelihoods (Commitment 3), and social inte- context; (b) review of country programs to support risk gration (Commitment 4). Panels run in parallel with the management; and (c) development of explicit recommen- Geneva 2000 summit discussed the social risk manage- dations for socialprotection interventions based on ment approach and recognized its support of the international good practice and country experience. Copenhagen goals. The PRSP Social Protection source- book and the Pension Reform Primer series already reflect the identification of best practice, while the "Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Social Safety Net Initiative" is currently extending the best practice approach (Chapter 2). e The World Bank will continue to integrate the social risk management approach in its ongoing work with United Nations institutions to develop principles ofsocialpolicy, and will strengthen its work on distilling goodpractice, thus placing socialprotection and social risk management high on the global agenda. (CEAIL FR THREE > O( IAI RISK SIAN AG EIMENT ANI) THE WOR)LD BANK'S 5'4ORK ON P'ON' IER Y RF DUCT ION |;B O X 3 . 2 matching grants and making resource allocation deci- sions. It defines a process by which community groups COMMUNITY-DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT organize and take action to achieve their common goals in the context of an enabling policy environment, and 'What is it that the poor reply when asked what might with support from responsive institutions (for example, make the greatest difference to their lives? They say, private suppliers, local government, and national agen- organizations of their own so that they may negotiate cies). with government, with traders, and with NGOs. One key indicator of community-driven development Direct assistance through community driven is the extent to which "communities manage internal and programs so they may shape their own destinies, external funds themselves" (World Bank 2000a). The link Local ownership of funds, so that they may put a stop between this definition and social risk management is to corruption. They want NGOs and governments to clear. Social risk management is based on the notion that be accountable to them.' poor and vulnerable people manage risk and that govern- ments and markets cannot do everything for them. James D. Wolfensohn, World Bank Annual Meetings, Conversely, while communities and families can do much Fall 1999 on their own (Box 3.2), they need support (from govern- ment, for example) to provide access to markets and public services. The social protection sector of the World Bank has SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT AND played a key role in developing a framework for commu- COMMUNITY-DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT nity-driven development, and several of its key principles Community-driven development is a key strategy for are already being implemented in a number of social implementing the Comprehensive Development funds (see Chapter 2, Guiding Principles; Chapter 5). Framework (CDF). By community-driven development, the World Bank refers to a process that "gives community -e The socialprotection sector will continue to play a leader- 22 organizations authority and control over decisions and ship role in the conceptual andpractical work necessary as resources" (World Bank 2000a). This includes direct the World Bank implements the strategy of community- responsibility for managing internal resources and external driven development. 1 See the regional Social Protection Sector Strategies summarized in Annex D. At the country level, Argentina, Benin, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Morocco, Nigeria, Pakistan, Togo, and Zimbabwe have used the framework to conceptualize social policy issues, and Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Peru plan to apply it in fiscal year 2001. 2 The areas covered include social funds (Jorgensen and Van Domelen 2000), income support schemes for the unemployed (Vodopivec 2000), and the challenges and opportunities for provision of old-age security in East Asia (Holzmann, Mac Arthur, and Sin 2000). 3 A recent comprehensive regional study also used a similar approach in its analysis (see de Ferranti and others 2000). 4 Morocco is currently piloting the incorporation of social risk management into its Comprehensive Development Fund, and more country pilots are envisaged to gain firsthand experience. 5 See IMF/IDA 1999; World Bank 1999a; World Bank 2000e. St) IA P I l'R 1 1: I IO)N % I: 1 ()R I' 1 R A IJ 1.) C H A 0 u r PUTTING SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT TO WORK BEYOND THE SOCIAL PROTECTION SECTOR The social risk management framework has applications beyond the social protection sector, establishing social protection as a thematic issue (such as gender) in other sectors. Social risk management considerations apply to many aspects of the World Bank's work, including national shocks, financial reform, microfinance, rural development, the informal sector, infrastructure investments, health, population, nutrition, education, and gender issues. If appropriate policies are in place in these areas, then households are much less vulnerable. This indicates a need to build greater awareness of the importance of risk reduction for development. Furthermore, social risk management can be used as an analytical tool to assess interventions in various sectors. This chapter provides examples of the information sharing and analytical role that social risk management can and should play in selected areas beyond the traditional domain of social protection. NATIONAL SHOCKS intertemporal government budget constraint, and the Economic crises, natural disasters, and civil conflicts are availability of short-term financing) and operational the three most important causes of aggregate shocks to collaboration across sectors regarding physical and society, and each leads to sharp increases in the incidence policy-related risks. of poverty (World Bank 2000f). Between 1990 and 23 1997, more than 80 percent of all developing countries e The World Bank will work toward strengthening coordi- experienced at least one year of negative per capita output nation in its support for interventions in disaster growth as a result of these phenomena. Given these management and socialprotection. circumstances, the following observations and recommen- dations can be made: U The covariant nature of aggregate shocks means that informal or market-based risk management instruments * Since many aggregate shocks are manmade, following are often ineffective. However, this is not always the from inappropriate macroeconomic policy or political case. For example, insurance against natural risks can conflict, there is a clear need for the World Bank to still function if appropriately structured and priced, and make governments aware of their negative effects on international diversification of assets and fiscal stabiliza- economic development in general, and on poor people tion funds can smooth national consumption in an in particular, and to encourage governments to adopt effective manner. The use of international insurance preventive policies. against natural risks is not yet well developed, but it * Truly exogenous shocks such as natural disasters also should be encouraged since it has the potential to lend themselves to preventive policies, such as the benefit poor people. construction of earthquake-proof housing or dams, or the relocation of people-often poor people-to areas The World Bank will encourage development andpiloting less likely to be affected. While costly (and often ofappropriate insurance products using the risk manage- beyond the capacity of poor countries), these measures mentframework. may prove to be cost-effective from a long-term present value consideration. This raises issues relating to financing (for example, present value trade-offs, THE FINANCIAL SECTOR U Work with community-based groups and nongovern- The World Bank has been heavily involved in financial mental organizations to increase financial literacy, and reform for many years, with a dramatic increase in include information and education campaigns to this lending during the recent global financial crisis. The end in financial sector instruments. reforms have mainly focused on building a strong, viable, U Build links between poor entrepreneurs and the formal formal financial sector in client countries. banking sector to break down the myths surrounding A well-established financial sector is of fundamental "the vulnerable as unsuitable customers" as, for importance in helping both the economy and individuals, example, the Chile Social Fund has done in linking both rich and poor, to handle risks. Almost by definition, small entrepreneurs with formal financial institutions. financial markets exist to supply and price risk manage- U Support the creation of secondary insurance markets to ment instruments according to demand. Safe money and give the formal sector an incentive to reach out to poor deposits are elementary but key risk management instru- and excluded segments of the population with insur- ments, since they allow individuals to insure themselves ance and banking products. by pooling their assets over time. Their existence enables individuals and households to cope with many idiosyn- 4 In supporting macroeconomic and financial sector cratic shocks, thereby representing a first line of effective reforms, the World Bank willpay increased attention to defense, particularly for poor people.' Having multiple the needs ofpoor people for appropriatefinancial instru- financial assets in portfolio with other assets (physical and ments to help them manage risk. social capital) constitutes a further level of risk manage- ment that allows the pooling of risk not only over time RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND but also over other imperfectly correlated assets. EXTENDING THE RISK POOL Purchasing formal insurance is the optimal method of The lack of alternative risk management instruments managing risk in a world of full information and perfect often forces poor rural households to adopt self-insurance markets. But insurance markets are generally not inclusive strategies that are disadvantageous in terms of direct and due to asymmetric information and lack of appropriate opportunity costs. This hinders them from efficiently risk pooling. managing their limited portfolio of assets and from In most countries, a lack of access to market-based adopting more productive technologies, which, in turn, institutions, rather than inability to pay, prevents poor results in more risks, decreased returns, and perpetuation people from using savings as a form of risk management. of the vicious cycle of poverty. In many areas, socially excluded groups are barred from The World Bank is considering several innovative ways using these institutions even if they have the financial to manage rural risk, notably manifestations of means to do so. Instead of simply accepting this status commodity price and yield fluctuations at the macro quo, the public sector and donors could increase the (national), meso (community and local government), and access of poor people to safe financial services and assets micro (household) levels (see Siegel and Alwang 1999).3 in the following ways: These include: (a) commodity price management using international and domestic commodity and finance/ * Protect the financial assets of poor people by keeping insurance markets; (b) disaster management with a focus inflation low, ensuring sound regulation and supervi- on risk reduction and mitigation using various technolog- sion, and promoting informal savings mechanisms ical approaches (for example, advance warning systems) and formal savings institutions.2 Practical implementa- and finance or insurance instruments; (c) rural finance tion information is available (for example, from the (notably microfinance) with credit and savings for agri- World Bank's Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest), cultural and nonagricultural production and but it needs to be reassessed in terms of its implications consumption, along with some insurance instruments for risk mitigation and coping. Many of the micro- and new types of interlinked contracts; (d) crop insurance credit programs that have successfully reached women, programs that have objective criteria for collecting such as the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh and the damage payments and that cover both those with and Self-Employed Working Women's Association in without land, agricultural and nonagricultural sectors in India, now offer health and other kinds of insurance rural areas, and urban areas; (e) safety nets based on to women. self-targeting of employment and food programs that SOCIAL PROTECTION S1 TOR S-I'RATFGY are universally accessible at all times; and (f) various sectors have all too often adopted a sectoral approach, community-based programs financed by social funds which has made it harder to coordinate interventions in (Jorgensen and Van Domelen 2000). areas of potential synergy.4 While the primary role of the human development sectors is to build human capital, - The World Bank will strengthen the linkages in its adopting a holistic social risk management approach can support for rural development and social protection, help achieve this. including the development and monitoring ofpilot In health, preventive and other basic health services programs. (for exarnple, immunizations) are generally very impor- tant risk reduction measures. The existence of a good INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS health care system increases the ability of poor people to Infrastructure investments such as the construction of a mitigate the impact of a potential health shock, and the road, an irrigation system, or a dam have an important curative side is important to help poor people cope once bearing on the development of an economy and on the the shock has occurred (see Box 4.1). opportunities available to poor people. In the past, the In the area of health insurance, social risk management central and often only criterion used to evaluate such relates most closely to risk mitigation and risk coping. investments has been the estimated rate of return. The focus of health insurance for poor people needs to be In addition to economic effects, these investments on catastrophic illness. Compulsory participation, the also have an important impact on the vulnerability of introduction of waiting periods, and household or individuals. These effects may not be equally distributed, community collective insurance could reduce adverse thereby possibly decreasing vulnerability for some and increasing it for others, at least in the short run (for example, through resettlement). The construction of a B 0 X 4 . 1 road between an isolated village and a market town reduces the vulnerability of the village community by THE DISASTROUS EFFECTS OF A HEALTH making it easier for people to trade their goods, migrate, SHOCK IN LAO CAI PROVINCE, VIETNAM 25 and access financial market institutions and their instru- ments. Similarly, irrigation projects are useful in Nha is 26 years old and his family has twelve reducing output risk in agriculture when rainfall is members. The family used to be one of the richest in unpredictable. The construction of a dam can be the key the village, but is now one of the poorest. It has instrument for preventing flooding in agricultural and suffered two shocks in recent years. First, Nha's father residential areas. These risk reduction or mitigation died two years ago, so there are now only two main effects of infrastructure are often not taken into account laborers in the family-Nha and his mother, who is 40 in assessing the costs and benefits of a potential invest- years old. Nha has two young children. Two years ago, ment, and as yet the data and analytical toolkits needed his daughter Lu Seo Pao had a serious illness and had to assess vulnerability effects do not exist. to undergo operations in the district and province hospitals. Nha's family had to sell four buffaloes, one -+ Where appropriate, data should be gathered on the risk horse, and two pigs to cover the expenses of treat- prevention aspects of infrastructure investnments and ment. The operation cost several million Vietnamese toolkits should be prepared to ensure that vulnerability Dong, but the child is still not cured. All the people in effects are taken into account in infrastructure project his community helped, but no one could offer more planning. than 20,000 Vietnamese Dong. Moreover, Nha's younger brother-Lu Seo Seng, who was in grade 6- HEALTH, NUTRITION, POPULATION, had to leave school in order to help his family. Nha AND EDUCATION says that, if Lu Seo Pao had not become ill, his family This section briefly outlines how the social risk manage- would still have many buffaloes, he would have a ment framework applies to the health, nutrition, house for his younger brother to live in, and Seng population, and education sectors, as well as to borderline could have continued his studies. areas that cut across human development. Like the social protection scctor in the past, the human development Source: World Bank, 1999c. CHAPTER FOUR * PUTTIING SOCIAL RISK MANAGENlkT T O WORK BEYOND THU SOCIAL PROTECTION SFPUTOR selection and increase risk pooling and sustainability. Poor U Service providers often introduce user fees in education families may not always be able to afford to put aside (and health) with the assumption that public safety nets resources for a health-specific insurance fund. One will take care of the poorest people. Yet this is often not possible alternative is a general savings account with a realistic assumption, especially in poorer countries withdrawal restricted to times of catastrophic or major with lower levels of institutional development. expenditure needs. They can be multipurpose (not just U After a covariant shock, a good option may be to for medical emergencies), so that poor people would be introduce safety net programs that can support the more willing to save, and can be protected by strict continued demand for education by poor people (for enforcement of the "catastrophic event" withdrawal example, school fee exemptions and grants associated rule. This type of savings/insurance mechanism could with continued school attendance). In the absence of be developed on a pilot basis by informal financial such transfer mechanisms directly linked to social institutions or non-governmental organizations. sector service use, short-term shocks can permanently The role of traditional health practitioners and indige- damage the human development outcomes of poor nous medicine has not received sufficient attention in people. There is evidence (for example, from Indonesia health sector reform programs. Most poor people in in the aftermath of the financial crisis) that poor people Africa use traditional healers and indigenous medicinal reduce their consumption of education services as a plants as their first line of defense against health shocks. risk-coping mechanism, which almost always causes Community support is needed to identify the safest and irreversible income losses in poor households. This type most efficacious of these plants and other environmental of program should be a priority in countries that have resources and practices, increase their availability, and relatively high administrative capacity in the public or promote greater synergies between the Western and tradi- private sectors. tional medicinal systems. Health policies in South Africa, Ghana, and Ethiopia are starting to move in the direction Finally, the social risk management perspective is of better integration. This approach needs to be pursued important to a number of areas that cut across the human in more countries as a potentially cost-effective means of development sectors: 26 reducing the exposure of poor people to chronic and acute U Preventing disability is mainly a matter of health risks. preventive health measures and occupational safety Nutrition risk management measures are crucial for (plus conflict prevention). Its mitigation involves prevention (household food security and good weaning providing inclusive education and appropriate and feeding practices), mitigation (storing food in case insurance, and coping requires curative health care of an income crisis), and coping (food transfers and and safety nets. food for work). Many of the small yet frequent income U Early childhood development services-targeting losses of poor people in Africa due to illnesses are linked the most rapid period of human developmenr- to malnutrition, the lack of a safe water supply, and provide an exceptional opportunity to reduce risks poor sanitation. Greater and more integrated investments and improve human capital in general. Since early in these areas may be a more cost-effective tool for childhood development programs tend to generate reducing this type of noncatastrophic risk than health fiscal savings by lowering school repetition rates insurance schemes. and/or social welfare transfers, they are also fiscally Some population issues relate to risk management affordable in low-income countries. (such as the practice of having large families as a form * In its policies on the elderly, the World Bank's focus of insurance or diversifying assets) and risk reduction has tended to be on pensions. However, the social (the link between lower fertility and lower health risks, risk management framework should lead the World for example). Bank to direct more attention to a wider array of In the education sector, the social risk management human development concerns relating to the elderly, framework can provide ncw understanding in several ways: additional means of incomc support, and lifelong learning. These issues become especially important in * The best risk reducer is an excellent formal education. view of the dramatic demographic transition to an Too often, vocational education and training are used to older population that is occurring in many parts of try to fix the problems left over by an inadequate educa- the developing world. tion system; this is inefficient and inequitable. S I)( II PR I' I (I (IN I 1, K I R \ I> 1 1(; * It is now almost a cliche to advocate tackling the SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT AND GENDER HIV/AIDS epidemic through a multisectoral approach Analysis of social risk management and actions to lower rather than strictly through the health care system. vulnerability must take gender differences into account. The multisectoral approach requires more active coop- Although women and men share many of the burdens of eration among various groups, including National poverty, vulnerability, and risk, socially imposed Multisector AIDS Committees, district or community constraints in most societies also place women in an infe- groups, Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS rior situation. Women and men are often able to manage (UNAIDS), governments at all levels, donors, risk in different ways. For instance, women frequently employers, and social funds. It is important to identify have less education and thus are less able to reduce many and distinguish between delivery mechanisms that are risks (such as underemployment and disease). In addition, most effective for prevention, care, and coping. restrictions on women's ownership of assets and the low Analytical work on social risk management and AIDS quality of their property rights (for example, land tenure) (begun with UNAIDS) and operational work on how may decrease women's ability to mitigate risk. Even social protection instruments could better support though they carry the main burden of coping with shocks AIDS management will be necessary. The latter area is to the family, such as illness or droughts, laws or norms especially relevant for social funds. The gender dimen- may restrict their access to services that could help them sions of HIV/AIDS also merit more attention. In cope better (for example, curative health services). many cultures the burden of caring for victims, which Social gender disparities are not only inequitable but may entail sacrificing employment and education also lead to economically inefficient outcomes, resulting opportunities, falls almost exclusively on women. in reduced ability to manage risk. The Policy Research Women are also more frequently ostracized when they Report entitled "Engendering Development" (World become victims of AIDS and may even be forced to Bank 2000b) argues that gender inequality is costly to leave their communities. Developing such integrated approaches to human B O X 4.2 27 development is most important in poorer, less institu- tionally developed countries. In a Sub-Saharan African GENDER INEQUALITY AND country, for instance, it may be better to manage risks POVERTY REDUCTION by strengthening basic health and education services, early childhood development, and AIDS prevention Evidence is growing that gender disparities are not before taking more traditional social protection measures. only inequitable but also lead to economically ineffi- On the coping side, however, there is still a need for cient outcomes, including reduced ability to manage a mix of social protection and other human development- risk. Evidence from many countries shows that dispari- related interventions. ties between women's and men's access to, and control over, resources relates to systematically lower e To address these cross-cutting human development issues, access to health and education facilities among the World Bank is developing an operational strategy women, which leads to less than optimal levels of that builds on the existing sectoral strategies in health, participation in economic activities (Elson 1991; Anker nutrition, population, education, and socialprotection. 1998). Macro-level studies also confirm that better- A human capital developmentframework with a educated women contribute to the welfare of the next social risk managementfocus will he the cornerstone generation by reducing infant and child mortality, of such a strategy. lowering fertility, and improving the nutritional status of children (Hill and King 1995; Klasen 1999; Smith and Haddad 2000). Additional evidence points to the signifi- cant negative impact of gender inequality in secondary education on economic growth: a one percent increase in the share of women in secondary school education is associated with a 0.3 percent increase in per capita income (Dollar and Gatti 1999). CHAPTER POUR * PUTTING SOCIAl. RISK MANAGEMENT TO WVORK BEYOND THE SOCIAI PROTECTION SECTOR development and provides extensive support for this critical to address men and women differently, rather assertion. Rigid gender roles are often barriers to risk than thinking of poor and vulnerable people as an management, just as they are to static poverty reduction undifferentiated group. (Box 4.2). There is no doubt that the contribution of women to household income and production is crucial - In its work on poverty reduction, the World Bank will for reducing poverty. Many families rely on women's take account ofgender-based differences in social risk production to keep them out of poverty or to keep them management, especially regarding limitations on from falling even deeper into poverty. Therefore, it is womens ability to accomplish it. NO II' F IROV (:HIAI'R I :O(:R 1 As seen earlier, the alternative for poor people is disinvestment in human capital, which endangers future development prospects. 2 These include postal banks, which have a broad network and low transaction costs for small savers. 3 Many of these finance, insurance, safety net, community-based programs, and technical strategies are really new attempts at old approaches. However, the new programs take account of the lessons learned over the years and changed conditions in developing countries. 4 The human development sectors recognize this and will further develop an integrated approach in the coming years. 28 SO)CIAL PR() I F{TION ,l I, IOR STRAIFGY C H A f i v PUTTING SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT TO WORK IN THE SOCIAL PROTECTION SECTOR While Chapter 4 examined social risk management across a number of sectors and themes, this chapter applies the frame- work to the social protection sector. This process involves rethinking public sector programs against the benchmark of social risk management and expanding the notion of social protection to explicitly include support for market-based and informal risk management activities-areas in which the World Bank has some experience on which the sector can build. STRENGTHENING PUBLIC SOCIAL Providing Equitable and Inclusive Labor Markets. PROTECTION INTERVENTIONS Since labor is often poor people's main or only asset, Distinctions among risk reduction, mitigation, and equitable access to safe and well-paid employment is coping strategies are important in this analysis. Most of one of the most important aspects of risk reduction. the sector's labor market interventions' fall into the cate- Formalization of the labor relationship is reflected in basic gory of public support for risk reduction (see Table 2.2), standards, including the prohibition of forced labor and with the exception of income support for the unem- discrimination in employment and pay, the freedom of ployed, which is a risk mitigation effort. Most social association, and the right to collective bargaining. Since insurance programs relate to mitigation,2 even though the last two standards have political as well as economic some of the basic income support for the elderly and sick implications, some countries are reluctant to embrace overlaps with coping. Safety nets fit squarely into the them. Furthermore, the empirical evidence about their coping category, even though the social risk management economic benefits is mixed. The World Bank will framework indicates that safety nets should not only help continue to review the empirical analyses. The available people cope in the short run but also support longer-run evidence suggests that good industrial relations between risk reduction or mitigation. This section maintains the employers and employees may keep an economy stable reduction/mitigation/coping distinction while discussing and, with responsible leadership, may prevent settlements various public interventions, even though many that are detrimental to outsiders, who are often poor. The programs involve more than one strategy. At the end, evidence further indicates that to achieve this potential the section highlights how improved information and win-win outcome, core labor standards must go hand in communication technology can support social risk hand with building institutional capacity and trust management efforts. between the market partners and the government. A promising complement to public labor standards is Reducing Risk private or market-based standards established by stake- Reducing the probability of downside risk is a powerful holders (such as consumers, employers, workers, and instrument of social risk management. Many risk reduc- nongovernmental organizations). These standards range tion efforts remain outside the scope of social protection, from corporate benchmarking, codes of conduct, and such as maintaining macroeconomic stability, creating voluntary enforcement of industry standards, to sound financial markets, adopting growth-oriented poli- consumer activism in favor of labeling (Sabel, O'Rouke, cies, and establishing preventive measures against natural and Fung 2000). More knowledge about private stan- disasters (Chapter 4). Some social protection instruments dards-rheir potential and limits-and the interplay that support risk reduction are, however, essentially between public and private standards would help to linked to the labor market.r make labor markets more equitable and inclusive, B O x 5 .1 | THE IFC AND LABOR PROTECTION The IFC is exploring appropriate best practice goals and ways to work with its clients to achieve a significant develop- ment impact on both workers and communities. Following the March 1998 adoption of a Harmful Child and Forced Labor Policy, IFC has been pursuing other labor protection related tasks: * Preparation of a harmful child labor guide. The guide will assist clients in eliminating harmful child labor in their own and their value chain operations. The guide has been prepared based on extensive consultation with IFC clients worldwide and with other industries and business associations, NGOs, and government agencies. * Preparation of a labor practices discussion paper. The paper assesses the global experience in implementation and overall development impact of core labor standards, and considers the implications of these practices on IFC's devel- opment mission. * Preparation of a retrenchment guide. IFC support for the privatization of state enterprises often involves downsizing of the labor force and can cause severe economic and social problems. The loss of income sources and related bene- fits, such as access to health care and education, can cause long-term hardship and impoverishment unless appropriate compensation and mitigation measures are carefully planned and implemented. This document will provide guidance on how to deal with these issues in a practical and flexible manner with due consideration of local conditions and requirements. * Updating of health and safety guidelines. The WHO has estimated that chronic illness associated with working conditions, preventable injuries, and deaths in high-risk working environments cause approximately 3 percent of the global burden of disease. Sanctions available to national agencies and inspectorates to protect workers' health and safety are generally far less compelling than corporate standards and regulation in the workplace. IFC has existing guidelines on Health and Safety, which are currently being updated. 30 * Completion of a Community Development Resource Guide. The guide, accompanied by case studies, is intended as a resource to support IFC clients and other companies' efforts to establish effective community development programs. These programs promote sustainable economic growth and support livelihoods, education, skills building, and the health and welfare of a company's stakeholders, particularly people who are located near or affected by a company's operations. thereby contributing to risk reduction. Pilot programs in - The World Bank Group will approach issues surrounding the area of private standards will be undertaken in close public labor market standards on a pragmatic and cooperation with International Finance Corporation country-by-country basis. The Bank will learn from the (IFC) (Box 5.1). experience of the International Labor Organization (LO) Other priority labor standards involve minimum wage and other international organizations and will work with regulations, a minimum working age, job safety and secu- the private sector and the ILO on complementary private rity provisions (including for women), and severance pay. standards on a pilot basis. These regulations, while protecting workers, also increase labor market rigidities. More research will be necessary to Enhancing Pre- and In-Service Skills. A special chal- understand the most effective ways to increase labor lenge for any country is to build a system for helping the mobility and generate employment while protecting workforce develop new and better skills. Continuous skill workers from harmful situations. enhancement is crucial in a world economy in which human capital development increasingly drives growth. Equally important is the distribution of such growth among the population, since low-skilled workers are much more likely to become unemployed, stay unem- *O(:I A I 1'1t 1 t C I 1()N 91: I lOR I rl : I 1.(1 ployed for longer, and become increasingly marginalized. e The complex nature and global scope of the child labor Pre- and in-service skill training is closely dependent on problem is likely to require the World Bank to follow the the quality of the education system but is also influenced lead of ILO and UNICEF shif from evaluations and by the structure of the labor market, the wage-setting analytical work to the implementation of more pilot process, and the incentives and opportunities that projects, and cooperate more closely with the private sector. workers have to enhance their skills. Experience with government-run training programs Disability. People with disabilities are an underserved has been rather mixed. As a result, these programs have group in most developing countries. Estimates for devel- changed over time from being driven by the needs of the oping countries are poor, but disability may affect up to public sector to being driven by demand from the labor 10 percent of the world's population. Although the market. While the role of the government as a provider of connection is not well documented, disability in the programs is becoming limited, its role as a (co-)sponsor, household can lead to poverty because it is often associ- incentive setter, or quality insurer is likely to continue to ated with exclusion from school or the workplace, as well be important. While there is no blueprint for skills as stress due to intrafamily dependence. enhancement, countries at different stages of develop- Many sectors of the World Bank are developing and ment provide important lessons (Gill, Fluitman, and Dar extending their products and services to help clients 2000) that should help to develop a new poverty reduc- confront the disability issue. The challenge for the World tion and development-oriented paradigm. Bank is to develop high-quality activities that are appro- priate to the circumstances and means of its clients. Work -4 The World Bank Group will work with national and must be done to identify the causes and consequences international partners (including the private sector of disability, the best practices to reduce its occurrence/ through the IFEC) to pilot new approaches to skills- incidence, and ways to mitigate its effects. training projects through lending and to rework existing projects through the sectors quality enhancement program. e The World Banks social protection sector willfocus on ensuring that disability is taken into account in social Eliminating HarmJul Child Labor. Currently, an esti- protection interventions, such as pension reform and social mated 250 million children are working worldwide. In its find operations. most abusive form, child labor prevents children from receiving education, exposes them to damaging health Mitigating Risk risks, and limits their physical and mental development. Not all risks can or should be eliminated. The absence of Each of these effects will have a negative impact on their (downside) risk is likely to reduce individual work efforts, future earnings, thereby risking the perpetuation of and the prospect of (upside) risk is a crucial element for poverty in the next generation. Thus, reducing or elimi- entrepreneurial activities and education decisions-the nating harmful child labor is a powerful tool to dampen motor of economic growth. Insufficient risk mitigation the risks of poverty in adulthood for many children today. can have negative welfare implications, forcing people Until now, the World Bank has addressed child labor into insufficient or irregular consumption patterns. Also, by working to increase access to and relevance of educa- the absence of risk-mitigating instruments makes people tion. Recently, however, with support from the (especially poor people) more risk-averse. Therefore, risk- government of Norway, the Bank has followed the lead mitigating instruments that maximize benefits while of UNICEF and the ILO in taking direct actions to minimizing costs are needed, particularly in the areas of reduce child labor. Measures currently being tested old-age income security and unemployment benefits. include providing parents, employers, and society as a whole with information on the long-term welfare losses Old-Age Income Security. The World Bank's proposal for associated with child labor, strengthening the position of a multipillar approach to pension reform (World Bank children and women within families, and supporting 1994) shaped the discussion and implementation of targeted conditional transfer programs that make social pension reform worldwide. The multipillar system consists assistance contingent upon family efforts to keep chil- of three "pillars": (a) a publicly managed, unfunded, dren in school and away from harmful labor (see Fallon defined benefit scheme; (b) a privately managed, fully and Tzannatos 1998). funded, defined contribution plan; and (c) voluntary CH APTER FIVE* rPU lTING SO(CIAL RISK MANAGEMEFNT TO W)ORK IN TlHi SOCIAL PIROTECTIO £ N SECTOR retirement savings in the form of housing, insurance, or working on pension issues in some 60 countries in the other assets. The first pillar should take care of poverty 1990s. Annex A presents in detail the worldwide experi- concerns, and the second should provide income replace- ence with pension reform and the World Bank's ment. This approach should create more equitable and involvement. While almost all World Bank-supported affordable pensions and better safeguards against an aging reforms have moved in the direction of a multipillar population and political risk (for example, expropriation system, no two reforms have been identical. This reflects by powerful groups). It should also interfere less in indi- the differences among countries in terms of their starting vidual labor supply and saving decisions, contribute to conditions, economic and social environments, and national savings and financial market development, help national preferences. The absence of a rigid blueprint for protect older people from poverty, and better handle pension reform means that the World Bank emphasizes increases in longevity (James 1998). the conditions that must be fulfilled to trigger its support, The World Bank has evolved into a key player and which include distributive objectives, financial sustain- recognized depository of knowledge on pension reform, ability, macroeconomic feasibility, a sound regulatory and supervisoty framework, and sufficient administrative capacity (Holzmann 2000). | B O X 5 . 2 | The experience in countries moving toward a multi- pillar pensioii systeni (with a large, privately managed, GENDER AND THE DESIGN OF fully funded, and defined benefit pillar) has highlighted OLD-AGE SECURITY areas where multipillar pension schemes contribute to effective and efficient social risk management. The main Specific design features of a formal pension system, areas needing further attention include coverage, gender such as the statutory retirement age and provisions for (see Box 5.2), administrative costs, annuities, governance, survivors' benefits or a minimum pension guarantee, and financial market regulation and supervision. The all matter to the relative benefit flows that women and World Bank is now conducting important research and 32 men receive. Reforms in many countries have sought knowledge management on these topics.' to link benefits more closely to work histories, to encourage a long working life. While the new norms e The World BankfJuture work on pension reform will may appear to be gender neutral, work histories are focus more on the provision of retirement benefits for people often different for men and women, since women tend in the informal sector and on old-age income support to have shorter work histories because of time out of for the life-timepoor through public noncontributory the labor force to care for children. For example, in schemes and community support. This will be reflected several countries of the former Soviet Union in second-generation reform loans and the continuation (Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, Latvia, and and updating of the Pension Reform Primer series Moldova), the new systems deliberately penalize early (see "Knowledge Management" in Chapter 6). retirement and reward longer careers. With no change in behavior or policy, women's pensions will therefore ProvidingAppropriate Unemployment Benefits. Even generally be less than men's. (The implicit financial with well-functioning labor markets, there are times when returns for women remain, on average, higher than for a person is underemployed or unemployed. Receiving men due to women's longer life expectancy and redis- unemployment benefits prevents workers from experi- tributory minimum pensions.) The net change in encing large consumption losses and, at the extreme, wealth from the reforms is, however, higher on falling into poverty. There are also efficiency implications, average for men than for women, because men work since workers with the promise of income support are longer and get a higher pension. Women's longer life more likely to agree to accept temporary unemployment expectancy means that women can expect to spend as a result of enterprise or sector restructuring. The tradi- the last years of their life alone. If their pensions are tional approach to mitigating this risk, widely used in too low because of their work histories, the incidence OECD countries, has been unemployment insurance. of elderly poverty may increase. However, this is probably inappropriate for most devel- oping and transition countries, in which the shocks are Source: Castel and Fox 2001 more covariant, the informal sector is larger, and adminis- S0()(IAI. I'RO FCTION SE.C I OR STRATE(:Y trative capacity is low. Alternative instruments could mechanisms, including outsourcing to the private include means-tested unemployment assistance, social sector and nongovernmental organizations. assistance, public works programs, and severance pay from earmarked individual saving accounts (a still largely In-Kind Transfers, Subsidies, and Fee Waivers. untested measure). Subsidies for goods (for example, food and fuel) and services have been, and in some countries still are, the e World Bank work on unemployment benefits willfocus on main means of providing income support for poor people assessing which instruments are bestfor dijfrrent country in and after crises. However, empirical research indicates environments, including an evaluation of existing experi- that, in general, they benefit the better-off more than the ences, and piloting in countries where there is sufficient poor. Even when poor people do benefit, the income interest to do so, all in close cooperation with the ILO and effect is typically small while the cost to the public budget interested regionzal development banks. is high. For this reason, most countries are now imple- menting subsidy reduction programs. Something is Coping with Risk needed to replace these subsidies, but all of the possible To cope with a risk once it has occurred is the last and alternatives have imperfections. In-kind transfers of food, often only social risk management option. The govern- for example, may have undesirable incentive effects and ment has an important role in ensuring rights to financial incur large administrative costs associated with trans- and real assets that can be drawn upon in a crisis, but for portation and distribution, although such transfers have poor people who have no asscts, the government is the added benefits in terms of making the goods directly provider of last resort. available to beneficiaries. There are three main forms of public risk-coping assis- A special form of selective subsidy involves waiving fees tance: (a) needs-based cash transfers; (b) in-kind transfers, for school attendance or health care for poor people subsidies, and fee waivers; and (c) public works. Each has during an economic crisis. If the truly poor can be prop- advantages and disadvantages and presents different erly identified-for example, through screening by the options for dealing with issues such as targeting, coverage, local community-then effective targeting will be 33 and incentive effects. The appropriate size and mix of possible. Indonesia applied this approach with apparent programs will vary from country to country. Moreover, success during the recent crisis (Sayed and Filmer 1998). with all of these programs it is important to understand If substantiated by other experiences, this could be one the cultural factors determining resource allocation way to prevent poor people from coping with shocks by within the household. For example, targeting strategies taking their children out of school or by forgoing neces- must recognize that, in many cultures, women and girls sary health care. receive proportionately less food and other consumption goods than their male counterparts. Public Works Programs. These programs, in which the unemployed or underemployed earn income from Needs-Based Cash Transfers. In an ideal setting, the temporary jobs mainly in the provision, repair, and intention of targeted cash transfers is to bring every upgrading of infrastructure, offer a number of theoretical person up to a predefined minimum level of consump- advantages. The work requirement is a self-targeting tion. In the real world, however, many obstacles emerge. mechanism, especially if salaries are kept low (at or These include: (a) estimating and choosing the poverty below the market rate for unskilled labor), meaning line, (b) designing the system and administering means- that only the needy will apply for the jobs. The programs tests, (c) establishing budgetary requirements, (d) create some infrastructure, which, if well targeted (for finding the best way to make the transfers to the example, a road in a poor area), provides poor people communities or households, and (e) devising incentive with added benefits and a better ability to manage mechanisms for poor people, and (f) dealing with the risks. These advantages, along with the operational symptoms and not the causes of poverty. Countries are experience in countries such as India (Maharashtra) using a variety of other instruments, including proxy and Argentina, have led to calls for more permanent targeting, food subsidies, food stamps, and categorical public works programs (Box 5.3), given the difficulties benefits (such as social pensions and family benefits) of scaling up programs quickly, as experienced in and are experimenting with alternative delivery Korea recently (Prescott 1999). (IHAPTER FlO E * PUTTIINO SOCIA I. RISK NMANAGENIEN I' TO WORK IN IjiE SOC IAL PIROTEC''ITION sECTOR On the negative side, the cost of transferring benefits the degree of labor intensity and the quality of the infra- through public works programs is often high because of structure created. In addition, politicians often use these the need to finance materials and other inputs in addition programs to help increase support for the governing party, to labor. In some countries, it has proven difficult to get and there have been serious allegations of corruption in to a labor intensity of more than 30 percent. This many countries, mostly in programs where community problem is compounded by an apparent trade-off between involvement and project management have been absent or low. Yet the programs have so many potential benefits that it is important to attempt their improvement by B O X 5 . 3 thoroughly reviewing existing projects and involving communities in project selection and management. PERMANENT PUBLIC WORKS PROGRAMS In light of the social risk management approach, there is a need to focus on the following questions: Establishing delivery mechanisms for coping instru- ments has proven difficult during crises, when support -e How can the World Bank sustain its support for is needed most. This has led to calls for permanent safety net design and implementation? work programs "simmering" during normal times, The focus will be on impact assessment and lessons from which are accessible to individuals without work, and different institutional designs, while being as responsive as which can be expanded once a crisis hits. The ideal possible in lending (especially in crisis situations). project would involve: Important analytical work is currently ongoing with the IMF and the Asian and Inter-American Development * Participatory selection of projects that provide a net Banks under the aegis oftheAsia-Pacific Economic value added (positive rate of return) and not only Cooperation process. targeted income support; * Work opportunities at below the prevailing market -v What is the appropriate balance in supporting the wage in a self-selecting and targeted manner; three types of coping? * A trained administration that could scale up projects Since each type of coping has drawbacks and advantages, according to the gravity of the crisis; and information on program experience will be systematically * A protected source of available funds, ideally interna- collected and analyzed to provide the best advice possible tionally diversified. to client countries. The World Bank is increasingly being askedfor such advice, especially regarding which programs This safety net concept has great intellectual appeal. to scale up or down in a crisis situation. But its implementation faces all the challenges outlined in the text about public works in general, with -e How much is enough? the additional complications presented by the fact that While the globalfinancial crisis has emphasized the it would have to be able to be "on stand-by." The needfor coping programs, care must be taken to ensure Korea experience further demonstrates the difficulties that they remain appropriately sized and do not hamper in scaling up when a major crisis hits. In an ideal world, other forms of risk management. For example, ifa cash transfer programs would work the same way, but country increases its debt to pay for transfers, its ability in reality they have never been scaled up successfully to invest in human and physical capital in the future in a crisis. More promising avenues for developing a may decline, thus reducing individuals'ability to "simmering" safety net may involve the distribution of manage risk. Such issues must enter the World Banks food to children falling below a given nutritional stan- dialogue with the IMF in crisis situations. dard. Such a program would have clear benchmarks for scaling up or back, based on pre-established nutri- e How can coping assistance help with risk mitiga- tion levels, which would offer indications regarding the tion and reduction? necessary scale of the program as a whole. From the perspective of the social risk management framework, this relates to how social assistance can be Source: Based on Ravallion 1999 provided in a way that not only increases current levels of consumption for poor people, but also enables them S (I\I I' 5)P 1( II F ( \ N S i ( I OR SI RA5 I[ 1(; to better manage risk and climb out ofpoverty. T he World Bank will intensify its work with clients to Analytically, this would argue for providing assistance in incorporate appropriate information and communications the form of asset transfers, investment opportunities, and technology into projects and to review its procurement em7powerment, especially for marginalized groups. pracesses to facilitate implementationi. Research andpilot programs are needed in this area. PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR INFORMAL Information and Communications Technology AND MARKET-BASED INSTRUMENTS Information and communications technology (ICT) is As discussed in the previous chapters, the majority of developing at a rapid pace. It is a critical factor in social poor people have only informal mechanisms of risk and economic development, as well as for social risk management. While prevalent, these mechanisms are management and social protection. Transferring tech- neither inclusive of the poorest people nor very effective nology, management skills, and know-how is crucial for (and may even be detrimental), especially when the three main reasons: shocks are large and covariant. This means that the devel- * Reducing the "digital divide." Given the short innova- opment community needs to find ways to support, or tion cycles of ICT, the technological gap between "crowd in," prodevelopment informal mechanisms to industrial countries and the developing and transition make them more effective and inclusive and discourage, countries is already wide and is likely to widen. or "crowd out," the detrimental ones. Facilitating the transfer of technology and skills is the Putting more emphasis on informal and community- only way to prevent developing countries from falling based social protection services should not be seen as farther behind in this aspect of development. "giving up" on public structures. On the contrary, . Improving the business process. Applying ICT is not building up communities' ability to manage risk better merely a case of automating existing administrative enables them to start demanding better services from the procedures. It involves restructuring current business public sector as well. To achieve functioning public sector processes in social protection systems, which are often services, actors at the lowest possible level (local govern- extremely inefficient, leading to low contribution ment and the constituency they represent) must be strong collection for social security programs (such as old age, and have a sense of mutual accountability. disability, health, sickness, and unemployment), The World Bank has some experience in improving the inadequate file keeping and client contacts, and delays functioning of informal and market-based interventions, in disbursement. but it needs to learn more from what others are doing. * Redesigning social protection programs. Good ICT This section discusses some of the World Bank's key prod- systems require rethinking the design and delivery of ucts and strategic moves to meet the challenges identified social programs. For example, automated filing systems in three selected areas of activity: (a) scaling up social allow the identification of hardship cases as well as funds to expand community-driven development; (b) cross-checking among the beneficiaries of social supporting informal risk management by expanding legal programs. This permits a different design of social reform and legal assistance and "new" safety net activities; safety nets as well as the provision of (virtual) one-stop and (c) increasing poor people's access to market-based shops for all social programs. South Africa, for interventions by giving a risk management perspective to example, uses mobile cash payout machines that recog- financial reforms and re-emphasizing microfinance. nize fingerprints in the distribution of its social pension. This benefits up to 80 percent of the elderly Scaling Up Social Funds to Expand population, which is mainly illiterate and lacks forms Community-Driven Development of identification typical of industrialized countries Social funds are agencies that finance small-scale projects (Case and Deaton 1996). based on demand from poor communities and other local groups. Communities provide some of the financing to Financing social protection projects containing ICT ensure that the proposals are truly needed. Social funds components would increase the efficiency and effective- appraise, finance, and supervise interventions, but it is the ness of service delivery, thus making it easier for private sector or the communities themselves that imple- vulnerable people to manage risk. ment them. In the social risk management framework, social funds have a demonstrated ability to involve many CHAPTER FIVE * PUTTING SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT TO WORK IN THE SOCIAL PROTECTION SEICTOR actors in risk management (including nongovernmental improve project design and implementation to better organizations, communities, the private sector, and address vulnerability. governments) and to build on community-based interven- Other Support for Informal Risk Management tions (informal risk management techniques) to improve Family-based risk management is common throughout the effectiveness of public sector interventions. much of the world, but it has costs. In traditional soci- The Bolivian government established the first social eties, strong leadership by the head of the household or fund in 1987. Now more than 50 countries have agencies extended family often characterizes the risk management that are either called social funds or share their character- situation, consequently leaving women and children in a istics. No two social funds are exactly the same. Their weak position. Thus, some mitigation mechanisms, such objectives include building social capital, providing as forced marriage, can be detrimental to development. In services and infrastructure, and supporting decentraliza- industrialized societies, household or family members can tion and income generation. They are present in all claim risk sharing and income support through laws regions, with the greatest concentration in Latin America enforced by tribunals, which incidentally create incentives and Sub-Saharan Africa. Eastern Europe and Central Asia and reactions of their own. Given these tensions, what are have most recently incorporated the approach. As the possibilities and limits of government action to discussed in Chapter 2, social funds do well in terms of strengthen informal arrangements while keeping the targeting and sustainable impact (also see Bigio 1998). negative aspects in check? Two areas have been identified Social funds have a multifaceted and changing position as especially important: (a) increasing access to the right in the social risk management matrix (Table 2.2). They to own and build assets, and (b) supporting community- started out in the lower right-hand corner of the matrix, based care for the critically vulnerable (see, for example, in the form of support for public works programs. They "Dynamic Risk Management and the Poor: Developing a have now moved both upwards and to the left, toward Social Protection Strategy for Africa," World Bank 2000). more community management of programs and emphasis on investments that lead to risk reduction (for example, in Extending the Right to Own Assets, In the area of 36 preventive health care, water supply, and basic education). informal risk mitigation, individuals and households In the future, these funds will likely play a larger role in need to build up their assets in order to optimize their risk reduction and encourage the development of informal portfolio. However, there are often serious social and risk management arrangements. Social funds will also legal restrictions on the rights to build up assets, espe- have to give more attention to: cially for women. In many parts of the world, women cannot inherit assets from their deceased husbands * Fostering the flow and sustainability of benefits from (in some countries, they do not even inherit their own the infrastructure they finance, and maximizing its children). In others, women are barred from owning land impact (rather than just output); or having their own savings accounts, forcing them to * Targeting on the basis of vulnerability as well as use more illiquid assets such as jewelry. Important public poverty by differentiating contribution levels, devel- actions to change this could include the following: oping model projects for specific vulnerable groups, * Legal reform to extend property rights, especially and putting these groups in contact with existing to productive assets such as land and housing, government programs; including land titling and revised cadastres-this * Increasing the promotion of services in areas such as may also require specific measures to ensure that finance, legal assistance, preventive health projects, banks and other financial institutions will accept empowerment training, income generation, financial women's property title as collateral.5 literacy, and pilot support for informal, community- * Legal assistance and legal literacy programs, especially based risk management; and, for women and marginalized groups (such as indige- * Strengthening the focus on building social capital and nous peoples or minorities), both to educate them on Local organizational capacity through better participa- their rights and to help them to obtain access. tory techniques and decentralization of decisionmaking. * Assistance to organizations of women and marginalized groups in demanding better services. e The World Bank will support socialfunds in becoming integral to community-driven development and will SO(-IAL PROTEC:TION S(CTOR STRATE(Y B O X 5 . 4 |U* Piloting and increasing direct support for community- based services, like the Zunde Ramambo scheme in COMMUNITY-BASED INSURANCE Zimbabwe (Box 5.4). Social funds can be designed to combine state inter- e The World Bank, with its partners, willpromote the ventions with informal insurance mechanisms. In extension of ownership rights to assets and support Zimbabwe, for example, the recently operational community-based services for the critically vulnerable. Community Action Project will provide funding for communal grain storage facilities if required. Under Increasing Poor People's Access to these arrangements, the village chief sets aside a plot Market-Based Interventions of land and the community provides labor for agricul- The difficulties with microcredit in traditional social tural production. The produce generated is then protection programs have led the World Bank to reduce earmarked for particularly vulnerable households support for this kind of intervention. Similarly, with or to meet seasonal or sudden shocks. regard to microfinance, the World Bank now downplays its social role and emphasizes instead the need to build sustainable financial institutions. Given that financial Supporting Community-Based Services for the markets have a role to play in risk management for poor Critically Vulnerable. The AIDS pandemic in Africa people, the World Bank has an opportunity to start (and also threatening South Asia) has created extremely supporting microfinance interventions again, this time on high numbers of orphans, straining the capacities of a much more sustainable basis. Promising avenues include traditional informal support mechanisms. Compounding building knowledge and support through the following: this situation is the simultaneous need to care for thc dying. Social funds are exploring ways to support these * Promoting microsavings within social funds, other informal mechanisms and build community alliances for community-based mechanisms, nongovernmental AIDS work (in collaboration with UNAIDS). Various organizations' projects, and other social protection programs (for example, giving regular transfers to care- programs. This could prepare the way for a gradual giving grandparents) need to be piloted and modified on move toward microcredit. the basis of lessons learned. Another major challenge is * Piloting microinsurance in the form of microsavings the institutionalization of the disabled and incapacitated and credit institutions, also informally (for example, as elderly in the Europe/Central Asia region, which has is occurring with coconut workers in Sri Lanka). become unsustainable. Lithuania is piloting interesting * Creating links between safety nets and microfinance, projects involving community-based approaches, and for example, linking food rations for poor people with other countries are considering them. The World Bank savings (as in Bangladesh). can support community services for the critically * Experimenting with microfinance during conflict, vulnerable by: natural disasters, and financial crises. * Expanding the menu of community-based projects to include explicit support for care of the critically - The World Bank will support pilot programs that better vulnerable; integrate socialprotection interventions with microfinance * Quickly applying lessons from the de-institutionaliza- products, especially microsavings and microinsurance. tion of pilot projects to other countries; and, NOl'FS FROSt CHAI'TER FI VE Labor market policies obviously have many other objectives beyond social risk management, including the creation of opportunity and empowerment (World Bank 1995). However, what unites labor, old-age income support, and safety nets is that they all contribute to social risk management (as one of their objectives). 2 The World Bank's recent support to parents in Indonesia to keep their children in school despite the economic crisis is a good example of how a coping intervention can support long-term risk reduction and mitigation (through investment in children's education). CH-AI'PER 1 VP * P1 I'TIN(. S(1CIAL RISK %tANACEMI-NT 1'0 WORK IN THE SO(IAL I'ROTEC(riON SEC'IOR N(l0 '1 FRO)M C IIAI' FER FIV F. CONTINU'ED 3 The International Labor Organization has highlighted possibilities for collaboration with the World Bank on these important issues (ILO 1999). 4 The Pension Reform Primer series summarizes existing knowledge and country experiences, and a research conference in September 1999 highlighted areas of new and innovative thinking (Holzmann and Stiglitz 2001). 5 For example, Tanzania has taken a number of measures to guarantee that the gender equity clauses in the 1999 Land Law become effective. These measures include legal literacy training and issuance of special certificates to women landowners to ensure that financial institutions will accept their titles. 38 S>itF1 A [ 'PO l t ( I IO0 N >1: W I K i ''I I Y 1 1 (; C H A * ifs ix MOVING FORWARD: STRATEGIC DIRECTIONS Based on the social risk management framework, the World Bank proposes to work with external partners to convince policymakers of the importance of risk management to poverty reduction. It will also offer support to governments in implementing specific social protection instruments, or to other sectors in improving their programs' effect on risk manage- ment. This process will be demand-driven and characterized by joint learning and piloting in many areas where knowledge is still limited. In some areas the social protection sector has well-tested products (for example, in pension reform and support for community-driven development), while in others the World Bank will use its ability to link up with overall macropolicies or finance the scaling-up of other agencies' pilot efforts. The Bank's social protection sector will also continue to follow the lead of partners when they possess the comparative advantage (in issues such as child labor, for example). This chapter summarizes the implications for the World Chapter 4. This includes work on poverty reduction Bank of the new social protection strategy (both as a strategy papers and country strategy development under theme and a sector) spelled out in the previous chapters. the Comprehensive Development Framework, both in It explains in greater detail the potential impact on the creation of sourcebooks and the application of the regional work-program priorities, countries of emphasis, "security" dimension of the new WDR 2000/1 frame- the World Bank's products (changes, refinements, and work. In addition, the staff of the social protection sector new products), partnerships, and resources, both human will work with other World Bank staff (in the legal and financial. department and financial sector and rural development groups) to develop better approaches to informal and REGIONAL WORK PROGRAM PRIORITIES market-based risk management. Within the Human Based on the regional sector strategy work summarized in Development Network, examples of the sector's cross- Annex D, Table 6.1 presents shifts in the World Bank's cutting work include health insurance and AIDS work program priorities. This exercise assumes significant management in the health sector, and skills development growth in the allocation to the social protection sector in education. In its traditional areas, the sector is likely to within World Bank country budgets to reflect the do more work on labor markets, child labor, and safety increased demand for social protection services. Within nets, to continue its involvement in pensions and social the overall strategy outlined in Chapters 4 and 5-more ftnds, and to focus on mainstreaming disability and thematic cross-sectoral work, more support for informal youth issues into the regular work program. and market-based risk management, and re-evaluation of interventions for helping people to manage risk-the COUNTRIES OF EMPHASIS priorities for the regions reflect their specific risk profiles Two considerations-importance and opportunity-will and corresponding risk management arrangements. help determine the actual translation of the strategic There will be several shifts in the regional sector strate- directions into country programs. "Importance" refers to gies according to traditional subsectoral distinctions. The the significance of social risk management problems in a first important shift will entail an expansion in the country at both global and country-specific levels. From a amount and kind of work done by the social protection global perspective, this appears in two ways: (a) problems sector outside its traditional interventions, as discussed in in one country may affect other countries' ability to Table 6.1: The World Bank's Social Protection Priorities by Region Region Strategic Directions Work with other human development sectors to mainstream work on orphans and AIDS/HIV Sub-Saharan management; other sectors to strengthen community-driven development. Integrate pensions Africa and labor work more fully with the rest of social protection. East Asia Help clients to establish sustainable public safety nets, improve functioning of and access to and the Pacific market-based arrangements, and review and support informal safety net arrangements. Europe and Push strongly on second-generation reforms, better integrate social protection subsectors and Central Asia establish more community-based activities as a complement to public interventions. Latin America Integrate social risk management into country dialogue, with country papers helping to identify and the Caribbean gaps and the need for reform of risk management instruments. Middle East Improve the functioning of public provisions, the quality of services, and the synergy between and North Africa governments and civil society in providing social risk management instruments. South Establish social risk management as an important element of poverty reduction; focus on Asia microfinance, microinsurance, and pension reform in terms of operations. manage risk, for instance, through migration, financial * Issues of vulnerability compete with other priorities for contagion, or other spillover effects; and, (b) one country the attention of policymakers. may be exploring innovative solutions that could prove * Where vulnerability and risks are identified priorities, valuable for other countries. The type and scope of the nonsocial protection instruments (especially basic World Bank's involvement will also depend on the health and education) provide the best means of degree of interest each country has in addressing social dealing with problems such as drought, disease, and protection issues-in other words, the "opportunity" civil war in many African countries. for World Bank participation." * The capacity to implement social protection instru- Table 6.2 presents a conceptual framework useful in ments is so low (except when done in partnership with determining those countries to which the World Bank communities through social funds) that even if a social should direct most of its attention. Each country can protection instrument would be the ideal solution, the identify a set of services in the table that is most appro- costs of providing it may be prohibitively high. priate to its specific circumstances and budget capacity. The "countries of emphasis" (where the Bank is highly The World Bank will work to convince governments in involved) would be those that meet the criteria in the the Sub-Saharan region that risk management matters for first row and column of the table, even though the poverty reduction, but this may not guarantee that social full array of services would only be found in the "high- protection as a sector will become a top priority in Africa. intensity" countries. There is an increased interest in social protection inter- Sub-Saharan Africa presents special challenges. The ventions as components of other programs, for example, risks are numerous, severe, and widespread, while the reforming civil service pensions as part of overall civil means and instruments for risk management are limited. service reform. Very recently there have also been requests This would indicate a need for a special emphasis on the on a subregional level in several social protection areas, region. However, three constraints limit the opportunity and this may be a promising avenue for support during for the sector: the later years of the strategy implementation. SlOC IAL PROTECTION S ECTOR S l RAl EGY STRATEGIC DIRECTIONS countries in Table 6.2), the World Bank will support BY PRODUCT TYPE analytical work upstream in the process of preparing a The World Bank's services work best on an integrated Country Assistance Strategy (CAS) to highlight the basis. However, for presentational purposes, this section importance of social protection. will categorize the strategic directions required by the new social protection approach in terms of the World Bank's Analytical and Advisory Activities traditional products and services (see Table 6.3). The social protection sector's strategic reorientation will create some changes in the World Bank's analytical and Country Strategy Work advisory products, including the following; The successful implementation of the World Bank's social * More comprehensive and action-oriented economic protection sector strategy will depend on the extent to and sector work and more dynamic poverty assess- which countries integrate social protection analysis into ments. This will involve assessing not just numbers their own strategy work.2 The World Bank's social of poor people and their distance from the poverty protection sector will continue to help countries with line, but also their vulnerability and income trajecto- their Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) at the ries, and expanding participatory poverty assessments macro level, to ensure the incorporation of the issue of that include poor people's risk management options security (risk management), and at the sectoral level, to and techniques. make certain that the analysis and proposed interventions * More research. Topics that deserve more research (as outlined in Chapter 4) occur within the new strategic attention include reducing child labor, supporting framework. In the relatively less poor countries that do informal safety nets and "simmering" safety nets that not produce PRSPs, the World Bank will adapt its PRSP are ready when a crisis hits, developing income support Sourcebook for application to Country Economic systems for the unemployed and the elderly poor, Memoranda, Poverty Assessments, Social and Structural and increasing the coverage of social protection Reviews, and other analytical work. In countries that do services and legal protections. not have these reviews (the "engagement" and "pivot" 41 Table 6.2: Potential Role of the World Bank in Social Protection: Framework for Selection Importance of Social Important as potential Protection Important from a country innovator and less Little global importance Opportunity of potential spillover important in terms of Level for Bank spillover High intensity countries: Learning and innovation Regional priority countries: Full support for lending, countries: Diverse support by Regions in Interest in borrowing knowledge sharing, and Full-scale support by Regions, analytical and lending work, and dialogue analytical work. emphasis on learning and quality assurance services innovation loans and monitoring offered by Sector Board on a and evaluation. Support from demand-driven basis. Sector Board on quality and knowledge services. Pivot countries: Limited involvement, only to Minimal or no World Bank Intesiv diaogu, anlytcal capture learning from country's involvement. Interest in dialogue only work, major emphasis on experience to the benefit of upstream work in Country World Bank client countries. Assistance Strategy . Engagement countries: Limited involvement, only to No World Bank involvement. Mosty Setor oardresorces capture learning from country's No interest in World Bank Mostly Sector Board resources experience to the benefit of involvement in social Country Assistance Strategy. World Bank client countries. protection Mainly analytical work and knowledge sharing, often led by other agencies or other sectors (e.g., UNICEF on children). C H A I' T F R S I X * ( V1 I N (; F ) R \' A R D: S r R A T E G I C D I R E C F I o N S Table 6.3: Changes in World Bank Products Based on New Social Protection Approach Product Shifts in Strategy Required by Social Risk Management Approach Country * Promote risk management as a theme in the overall discussion of poverty reduction strategy work * Use tools such as the social protection PRSP Sourcebook to encourage the incorporation of social protection instruments into country strategies Analytical and * Move to more comprehensive and action-oriented sector analyses advisory services * Improve dynamic vulnerability aspects of poverty assessments, especially from a gender perspective Portfolio management * Maintain the sector's portfolio in a quality leadership position and quality enhancement * Evaluate the explosive growth in lending, and rework existing operations against the new risk management benchmark Knowledge management * Expand and maintain reform "primers," which compile current analytical thinking, operational lessons, and case studies into an accessible handbook format * Explore new dissemination technologies Lending * Undertake more pilot programs * Employ adjustment operations in countries still in need of first-generation sector reform and initiate second-generation reforms * Scale up community-driven development based on social funds Information * Support dissemination of the new risk management and social protection 42 communicationapproach, including through the World Development Report 2000/1 and the World Bankinstitute Evaluation * Refine evaluation criteria and benchmarks * Adjust household surveys to better reflect vulnerability indicators including intra-household data * Assess the appropriateness of different risk management instruments Portfolio Management and poor people manage risk, using this strategy paper as a Quality Enhancement benchmark. However, many critical questions remain, such The highest priority for the sector is to ensure that the as how to measure vulnerability and how to balance lending portfolio remains among the best in the World coping, reduction, and mitigation strategies. In the area of Bank. This will require significant investments, since the labor market and training projects, the portfolio may need portfolio has expanded very rapidly without a corre- to be restructured as the World Bank generates new knowl- sponding rise in resource allocations. It is unlikely that the edge and begins to learn from pilot experiences. nature of portfolio support will need to change, except to ensure that projects reflect the social risk management Knowledge Management framework (especially in terms of monitoring and evalua- To ensure that the best available knowledge is applied to tion). The Sector Board's recent implementation of "quality the World Bank's products to maximize their impacts, the enhancement reviews" (on-demand quality support social protection sector has found two approaches espe- reviews) has helped it assume a more proactive role in cially important. quality assurance. The Social Protection Sector Board is * Expanding and maintaining reform primers. The Social now in a position to judge all projects on how they help Protection Sector Board has pioneered work on reform > I(1 A 'I Pk 1 1 'i N I I ( I (I: , R,\ I:(;Y "primers" in the pension area. Each report in the generation of pension reforms, especially in Eastern Pension Reform Primer series brings together current Europe and Latin America, will require even more analytical thinking, operational lessons, and case collaboration and stronger implementation support as studies into a flexible and accessible handbook format. the World Bank moves into areas that are politically Over the next three years the World Bank's social difficult, require more institutional reform, and in protection sector staff hope to maintain and update the which knowledge is limited. This will likely involve Pension Reform Primer series and complete new greater use of programmatic lending instruments that primers on labor market interventions, safety nets, allow for an adaptable medium-term approach to social funds, and child labor. policy reforms with step-by-step capacity building, such * Exploring new technologies for dissemination. The as programmatic structural adjustment loans and Sector Board, together with the World Bank Institute credits, and adaptable program loans and credits. and the Development Economics research group, will Similarly, many social funds are likely to be scaled up to support conferences and knowledge dissemination via cover the whole country through the use of Adaptable the Internet. It will also seek the collaboration and Program Loans, as part of the overall community- support of regional networks of practitioners, such as driven development agenda. the regional social funds networks. Information and Communication Lending In collaboration with its development partners, the World Overall, successful implementation of this strategy will Bank's social protection sector will continue to focus on mean lower annual lending amounts. This is because the the importance of managing risk and insecurity to reduce social protection sector of the World Bank will generate poverty. Special efforts will be required in presenting this more but smaller projects from which it can pilot and vision of social protection to policymakers and to broaden learn, since the need for large-scale first-generation their view of social protection, especially regarding its reforms and crisis lending is subsiding. Other considera- links to macroeconomic policy. The World Bank Institute tions for lending include the following. and the World Bank's external affairs department will be _ Piloting new approaches in traditional areas. The social critical internal partners in this area. The World Bank protection sector staff will develop and implement a Institute has already incorporated elements of the new series of pilot learning and innovation loans.? Based on view of social protection into training courses for African the outcome, the use of other lending instruments may academics and into its core courses in pensions, labor, and be appropriate, including sector investment loans and safety nets (the last two still under development). adaptable program loans. * Reorienting adjustment lending for first-generation Evaluation reforms. The sector will continue to use adjustment Evaluation has been relatively limited so far. The introduc- loans to facilitate the initial "stroke of the pen" reforms tion of social risk management will reshape the way the (where there is mainly need for legal or regulation World Bank thinks about assessments and will require: changes requiring few or no institutional reforms). U Developing appropriate indicators for risk manage- Likely options for future adjustment loans include ment and vulnerability at the household and redressing the overloaded formal (mainly public sector) community levels; social protection programs in Africa and other low- U Working across the sector group with units involved in income countries, establishing appropriate safety nets, research, such as the Development Economics Vice- moving labor market reforms beyond a simple "markets Presidency, to adjust the format of the living standard know best" approach, and initiating legal reforms to measurement surveys and to support the collection of strengthen property rights (especially for women). If more household and community-based panel data;' crises re-emerge, the social protection sector will be U Encouraging the Operations Evaluation Department to ready and able to raise its crisis lending quickly based assess the appropriateness of various instruments in on its recent experience (see Chapter 2, Guiding preventing, mitigating, and coping with crises (a planned Principles). evaluation of social funds would benefit from the incor- * Using more flexible investment loans for second-gener- poration of the risk management framework); and ation reforms and for scaling up social funds. A second U Expanding the use of beneficiary assessments. CHAPT F R SIX * M I VI NG F O R B'AR D: ST RAT E GI C DI R E CTIO NS PARTNERSHIPS |BOX 6. 1 It will become increasingly important for the World Bank to work with partners in the area of social risk manage- SIMILARITIES IN PARTNER AND ment. The Comprehensive Development Framework WORLD BANK CONCEPTS process will be critical in building partnerships with other development agencies on the World Bank's social protec- The United Nations Development Program (UNDP) has tion strategy. On the conceptual front, a consensus is recently embarked on a Global Program on Sustainable already emerging among several key actors on a frame- Livelihoods, formulated as a response to the 1995 work similar to social risk management (see Box 6.1). World Summit for Social Development. The UNDP's In forming partnerships in the area of social protection, approach is, in turn, based on the sustainable liveli- the World Bank's generic principles for partnerships hood approaches of the Institute for Development should apply.' Studies, and the International Institute for Sustainable * It is best to set up operational partnerships in a given Development, which focused attention on how house- country setting under an overall agreement to cooperate holds use their assets to smooth their income and among the agencies, while it is best to establish knowl- consumption and reduce vulnerability (Singh and edge partnerships on a global level. Gilman 1999). The UNDP is already beginning to intro- * Partnerships should be founded on a division of labor duce its sustainable livelihood approach in several corresponding to the partners' comparative advantages countries. The United Kingdom's Department for in terms of output. International Development has also embraced the * While partnerships are important, they are costly to sustainable livelihood approach and has organized a establish and maintain, so it is necessary to review them Sustainable Livelihood Resource Group. It recently periodically to ensure that their positive impact on held a workshop in which emerging approaches across country programs justifies their costs. a spectrum of donor agencies (ILO, World Bank, Department for International Development, and Asian Governments must take the lead in implementing Development Bank) showed great similarities, as many of the measures outlined in Chapters 4 and 5, but summarized by de Haan (in Conway and others 2000): for rhese measures to be successful, other actors will also have to be involved, including the private sector and civil ... various international development agencies have society. This calls for taking stock of partnerships in light slightly different understandings of what social of partners' current and planned activities, and setting protection is. But two issues are common. First, it priorities. In this process, the social protection sector emphasizes risk and vulnerability. This recognizes proposes to consider partnerships according to three the dynamic nature of poverty, and-not least as a dimensions: tvpe of content, type of cooperation, result of recent crises like in East Asia-focuses our and type of partner, as outlined in Table 6.4. attention on the need to be prepared for crises. This Partnership by type of content falls into three main should help us toward a proactive social policy categories: knowledge management, which includes the agenda, one that-as put forward in the World Bank creation, absorption and dissemination of relevant framework-emphasizes the need to assist individ- processed information; training and institution building, uals, households, and communities to manage risk which involves training in toolkits, regional workshops on and increase security. Second, a social protection pension or labor market issues, and social fund practitioner framework emphasizes the need to provide support networks; and operational work, which encompasses all to the poorest. lending and other nonlending services. These three types of partnerships can be thought of in terms of the level of Source: Conway and others 2000 interaction: knowledge management occurs largely at the global level, training and institution building at the regional level, and operational work at the country level. Partnerships can also be distinguished by the level of cooperation they entail. Table 6.4 specifies three main levels of cooperation: information exchange, coordination SOCIAIL l'ROFECIION F(CT OR StFRATtFGY of activities, and active collaboration. These forms of Finally, Table 6.4 divides the World Bank's potential cooperation are important in terms of budgetary implica- partners into five main categories: international financial tions. Information exchange often involves low or zero and development institutions; United Nations System costs, especially with the advent of current technology organizations (including ILO and UNICEF); multilateral such as websites and e-mail. Coordination of activities knowledge institutions and sponsors; bilateral donor involves low or moderate costs, resulting essentially from institutions; and civil society organizations (most impor- prior analysis and transaction costs of communication. tantly trade unions and NGOs). Collaboration involves moderate to high costs, since joint The preceding analysis of partnerships sets the stage for secretariats need to be established and resources must be the decisionmaking process and assists in the identifica- committed to activities. tion of strategic implications, as shown in Table 6.4. Table 6.4: Partnerships and Strategic Directions International Financial Institutions International Monetary Fund Continued collaboration on Selective collaboration on coun- Social Protection PRSPs tries' pension reforms Regional development banks Enhanced information exchange Pension reform training Strengthened coordination on with Asian Development country operations with focus on Bank Institute Africa United Nations System International Labor Organization Continued information exchange Collaboration in social protection Collaboration in social expendi- and cooperation in child labor, training ture reviews and envisaged 45 labor market, and pension areas collaboration in actuarial services United Nations Children's Fund Cooperation in child labor Cooperation in child labor (UNICEF) protection protection and community- driven development UNDP, Social Commission, etc. Enhanced information exchange Enhanced information exchange Bilateral Donors Various bilateral donors Enhanced information exchange Training and capacity building Selective collaboration at through World Bank Institute country level on implementing and project activities social risk management Knovwledge Partners OECD and ISSA Continued information exchange Potential cooperation on ICT in social protection with ISSA European Union Commission Enhanced information exchange Strengthened collaboration on EU accession countries Civil society Trade unions and employer's Continued information exchange Continued seminars for trade Continued information exchange associations on core labor standards with union leaders, and seminars for with trade unions at country level global trade union organizations Bank staff on trade unions (ICFTU, WCL) Nongovernmental Organizations Enhanced information exchange Selective cooperation on country basis on CDD and child labor Netes: This table distinguishes three main types of cooperation: (a) exchange of information in all three content areas-knowledge management, training and institution building, and operations work; (b) coordination of activities (division of labor); and (c) collaboration in activities (ointproducts). (H A I' T E R S I X * N 0 VI N ; I O R W A R D : S T R AT Er C I C D I R F C T I O N S While the World Bank's social protection sector has signif- those with trade unions) as additional resources icant and improved information exchanges with the became available. International Monetary Fund, the Asian Development With the shift in emphasis toward social risk manage- Bank, and the International Labor Organization, progress ment, there will be a need to build up the sector's staff has been slower with other potential partners. In partic- skills in broad risk management analysis and action. In ular, the social protection sector should strengthen other words, the sector will need to acquire or develop information sharing with the other regional development social protection specialists.' Staff members will increas- banks, the United Nations organizations (especially the ingly be expected to understand the social risk United Nations Development Program and the management framework and to apply it outside their own Commission of Social Development), bilateral donors, subsector. In addition, a limited number of specialists in and nongovernmental organizations. This is necessary areas such as social protection administration and infor- before considering higher levels of cooperation, and it also mation technology will be required. explains why more expensive collaboration activities are Besides recruitment, the social protection sector staff not fully developed. Coordination efforts will be will need to train other World Bank staff in how to use enhanced for operational work, mainly with the regional the social risk management framework for analytical and development banks and bilateral donors. Full collabora- operational work. The WBI is working on a series of core tion is now concentrated on a few items and often courses on labor, safety nets, and pensions, each of which financed through trust funds (for example, work with the will have an overarching social risk management session ILO/UNICEF on child labor, and with the ILO on labor showing the framework's links with the agenda beyond market issues in East Asia). The envisaged extension of the traditional definition of social protection. In addition, collaboration in training and operational work is selective the sector's current practice of sponsoring seminars on and in line with restricted budgetary allocations. conceptual issues and evolving operational practice will continue. The Sector Board is expected to expand its RESOURCE IMPLICATIONS nontraditional forms of training, including mentoring As the loan portfolio of the World Bank's social protection and apprenticeships. sector ages and grows over the next five to seven years, maintaining the level of quality and addressing the defi- LOOKING FORWARD ciencies in monitoring and evaluation will require rising Social policy issues became increasingly important investments, especially since the value of resources per throughout the 1990s. As the development community dollar lent today is around one-third of the value three recognized that economic growth alone was not enough years ago. In addition, the sector strategy proposed in this to guarantee lasting poverty reduction, it increasingly paper, if fully implemented, implies the need for addi- emphasized social policies and appropriate social protec- tional resources on top of those needed to maintain the tion instruments, given their role in achieving inclusive quality of the rapidly growing portfolio. growth. Similar changes in focus within the World Bank In light of the experience of other World Bank have led to a sharp rise in both the lending and sectors facing resource limitations, if the budget for nonlending services in the area of social protection. the social protection sector were to remain flat, the At the beginning of this new century, development sector would implement a "portfolio first" strategy, practitioners are realizing that, while individual programs concentrating on maintaining the quality of existing can improve people's welfare and reduce poverty, a more projects before generating new ones. Analytical and holistic approach is needed to make the quantum leaps advisory activities would have to be limited to providing necessary to lift most poor people in the developing world inputs into cross-sectoral work as required by the out of poverty. Many agencies are rethinking or devel- Comprehensive Development Framework and the oping their strategies for social protection using overall country dialogue. Geographically, the social comprehensive frameworks that emphasize both risk and protection sector would focus first on the "high-inten- redistribution, such as the social risk management sity" countries and expand to other "countries of strategy presented in this paper. The approaches are suffi- eniphasis" onilv as resources increase. The sector ciently similar to allow for good collaboration, while would maintain very limited partnerships and only sufficiently different to accommodate the varying objec- embark on more expensive partnerships (such as tives of the agencies, thereby creating a particularly SO IhAI l'ROJI()iI()\ 1< I I 011 S I JR A I FClE appropriate environment for the creation of partnerships. * Applying the work done under the Poverty Reduction The World Bank's Comprehensive Development Strategy Paper Sourcebooks to the continued develop- Framework reflects this more holistic understanding. This ment of good practice on social policy (the "social Social Protection Sector Strategy Paper follows this lead principles") under the leadership of the United Nations. by broadening the definition of social protection to * Assisting in the dissemination of the "security" aspects encompass any public intervention that helps individuals, of the World Development Report 2000/1 as consistent households, and communities manage risk and that with this strategy paper. provides support to the critically poor. The strategy outlined in this paper will help the World The next stage of this strategy, developing partnerships Bank to be a credible partner in worldwide social policy and a common approach to social policy within a global development in the following ways: vision of poverty reduction, will be the true test of * Participating actively in the followup to June 2000 whether the World Bank's mission statement is to become Global Social Summit in Geneva, and in any events a reality. related to it, under the leadership of the social develop- ment group of the World Bank. * Supporting the United Nations Commission of Social Our dream is a worldfree ofpoverty. Development as it prepares to make social protection the central theme of its 2001 session. NO TE, FROMS% CHAPTER SIX 1 More specifically, this refers to the interest the country has in social protection as compared to other sectors. 2 Pilots of a three-stage application of the social risk management framework are proving very promising in helping various Latin American coun- tries-including Argentina, Jamaica, Dominican Republic and Uruguay-to include social protection in the CAS process. Stage one identifies the main risks in the country, particularly those to which poor people are exposed. Stage two reviews the available risk management arrange- 47 ments-informal, market-based, and public-and their role and effectiveness for risk prevention, mitigation, and coping. Finally, stage three develops with the country the priority and sequence of actions necessary to close the gap between risk-determined need and social protection instruments. It also determines the urgency and timing for the reform and introduction or expansion of social protection interventions. 3 Areas identified in the regional strategy papers include: support for coping with the AIDS pandemic, new approaches to caring for orphans, and the integration of microfinance (especially savings) into social protection programs. 4 The regions and Sector Board would provide resources to support these activities. 5 This section uses as an important reference the new approach to partnership oversight and selectivity recently outlined by the World Bank (2000d). 6 The social protection sector will work with the overall Human Development Network in its efforts to strengthen the base of economists and other social scientists among network staff. 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Indonesias Economic Crisis on Basic Education: Findings Washington, D.C. from a Survey of Schools." World Bank, Washington, D.C. Processed. . 1994. Averting the Old-Age Crisis: Policies to Protect the Old and Promote Growth. New York: Oxford Siegel, P.B., and Alwang, J. 1999. "An Asset Based University Press. Approach to Social Risk Management-A Conceptual Framework." Social Protection Discussion Paper 9926. . 1995. World Bank Development Report 1995: World Bank, Washington, D.C. Workers in an Integrating World. New York: Oxford University Press. Singh, N., and J. Gilman. 1999. "Making Livelihoods More Sustainable." United Nations Development . 1996. World Development Report 1996: From Plan Program. New York, November. Processed. to Market, New York: Oxford University Press. Sinha, S., and M. Lipton. 1999. "Undesirable . 1998. EastAsia: The Road to Recovery. Fluctuations, Risk and Poverty: A Review." World Bank, Washington, D.C. Washington, D.C., October. Processed. - 1999a. 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New York: Oxford University Press. World Bank, Washington, D.C. REP E R k NC ES Regional Social Protection Sector Strategies - 1999. "Managing Social Risk in Latin America and the Caribbeani." Presentation by Ana Maria Arriagada, Sector Manager. World Bank, Latin America and Caribbean Region, Washington, D.C. - 1999. "Towards an East Asian Social Protection Strategy." (draft) World Bank, East Asia and the Pacific Region, Washington, D.C. World Bank. 2000. "Dynamic Risk Management and the Poor: Developing a Social Protection Strategy for Africa." (draft) World Bank, Africa Region, Washington, D.C. . 2000. Balancing Protection and Opportunity: A Strategyfor Social Protection in Transition Economies. World Bank, Europe and Central Asia Region, Washington, D.C. - 2000. "Risk Management and Poverty: Toward a Social Protection Strategy for South Asia." (draft) World Bank, South Asia Region, Washington, D.C. 52 - . 2000. "Reducing Vulnerability and Increasing Opportunity: A Strategy for Social Protection in the Middle East and North Africa." World Bank, Middle East and North Africa Region, Washington, D.C. SOC(IAL t'ROI EC lIO\N SEC TOR S'l-RAT EGY SOCIAL PROTECTION SECTOR STRATEGY: ANNEXES Annex 1 World Bank Involvement in Pension Reform Annex 2 Regional Research, Analytical and Advisory Activities, and Knowledge Management Annex 3 Application of the Social Risk Management Matrix to World Regions Annex 4 Summary of Regional Strategies Annex 5 Map of World Regions 53 A am s WORLD BANK INVOLVEMENT IN PENSION REFORM The World Bank has played a prominent role in shaping the global debate on pension systems, especially since its publication in October 1994 of Averting the Old Age Crisis: Policies to Protect the Old and Promote Growth. This study examined social security provision in terms of its impact on the economy, as well as its role in supporting the elderly. It recommended a "multipillar" system that could confer advantages in efficiency, growth, transparency, and risk diversification. Since this time, the World Bank has actively assisted countries in the design and implementation of such systems. This annex briefly reviews the multipillar pension model, the World Bank approach to pension reform, products it has developed to assist countries, experience in lending for pension reform, and key topics on the agenda in upcoming years. THE MULTIPILLAR SYSTEM which consists of a publicly run system financed on a The multipillar approach consists of three different PAYG basis from payroll taxes or the overall revenue base. pension strategies. The foundation pillar, commonly It could be part of a more general social assistance referred to as the second pillar, is a mandatory fully strategy, comprise a specific old-age social assistance funded, defined contribution system under private and strategy, target only the poor who were contributors competitive management, but well regulated by public during their working years, or provide flat pensions to authorities. It involves contributions by individuals, at a all contributors or persons over a given age. legislated rate, that are invested by a fund management Finally, a third pillar of voluntary savings complements authority to earn a high risk-adjusted rate of return. The the first two pillars. This system acknowledges that individual pension comes from the accumulated funds anything mandatory will not be optimal for all people. upon retirement. By contrast, traditional pay-as-you-go Some people will prefer to save a lot during their working (PAYG) systems take contributions from workers based years and consume more during their retirement years. on a future promise to pay a fixed percentage of final Others will prefer to consume more during their working salary (defined benefit) during retirement. However, they years and less during their retirement years. If the two use the revenue right away to pay current pensioners, mandatory pillars are kept reasonably small, providing leaving open the question of whether the promise is moderate income replacement only, then there will be sustainable. Thus, funded systems hold some advantages room for this voluntary pillar, which could enjoy tax over traditional systems. The second pillar would be able advantages but would not necessarily be subject to the to provide better income replacement for a given contri- same draconian regulation possibly required of the bution rate (particularly given an aging population), help mandatory funded pillar. insulate against political risk associated with public pension systems, enhance national savings, promote THE WORLD BANK APPROACH capital market development, and reduce labor market TO PENSION REFORM distortions by linking contributions to benefits. The environment for pension reform differs dramatically On the other hand, a defined contribution system among countries, in terms of both starting conditions cannot protect the poor against poverty in old age since (such as the inherited system and the stage of financial they may be unable to save sufficiently to guarantee a market developments) and implementation capacity. This livable pension. For this reason, it is essential to include implies that no two reforms will be exactly alike. another pillar, commonly referred to as the first pillar, Furthermore, even the best technically prepared pension reform runs the risk of failure if it does not reflect country B 0 X A . 1l preferences or if it lacks credibility among the population. In this sense, the preparation of a pension reform plan has PROST AND THE PENSION PRIMER to be done by the politicians and technicians within the country itself. Outsiders, such as World Bank staff, can The Pension Reform Options Simulation Toolkit provide advice based on worldwide experience, but (PROST) is a computer application developed by the ownership and public support must come from the client World Bank that allows for quantitative analysis and country. This requires flexibility and innovation rather modeling of pension systems useful for decision- than the mere application of blueprints. making regarding reform strategies. The model can As a result, the World Bank reacts flexibly to country project indicators useful in evaluating pension preferences and circumstances and has supported different systems, such as implicit pension debt, current fund reform approaches in different countries. The Bank does balances, and fund reserves. It first became available in not support all proposed reforms, however. There is too July 1997, and has subsequently undergone a series of much at stake for current and future retirees, and a improvements. PROST is useful to a wide array of country as a whole, to engage in a pension reform that is actors including government officials, policymakers, likely to fail in social and economic terms. The World and World Bank specialists, and demand for the model Bank has four key concerns in working with clients on has been extremely high. pension policy: (a) short-term financing and long-term viability; (b) effects on economic growth; (c) adequacy The World Bank's Pension Reform Primer series, and other distributional issues; and (d) political risk. produced by the social protection anchor unit with Moreover, it uses several criteria to judge the soundness of many contributions from regional staff, amalgamates a reform proposal: (a) distributive effects; (b) the nature country experiences and makes them available in a of the macro and fiscal policy environment; (c) capacity readable format to both World Bank staff and clients. of the administrative structure to operate a multipillar The Primer contains both country case studies and 56 system; and (d) the soundness of regulatory and cross-country papers, exploring themes such as tax supervisory arrangements.' treatment of funded pensions. Topical papers are also available in short notes that are readily accessible to WORLD BANK COUNTRY ASSISTANCE the non-pension professional. However, there are still With this approach in mind, the World Bank has been many issues for which there is no academic body of formally involved in some form of pension work in wisdom, or for which best practices in terms of imple- approximately 60 countries over the past 15 years, with a mentation have yet to be defined. The anchor unit's full range of products and services. These include lending, work program this year focuses on three of the most analytical and advisory activities, and generation and critical of these issues: coverage, annuities, and admin- dissemination of knowledge (for example, training, istrative costs. conferences, study tours, and application of specialized computer applications). The use of these tools has evolved For more information on both products, see over time in the different regions of the world, as is www.worldbank.org/pensions. especially evident in the lending portfolio. In addition to its financial products, the World Bank has provided formal nonlending services and outputs. public expenditure reviews containing chapters analyzing Economic and sector work for 31 countries resulted in pension systems, such as for Tunisia and Estonia. Policy 42 reports related to pensions. The World Bank also research working papers and other World Bank papers produced 39 publications and 8 network papers covering have examined pension system reform in countries pension-related issues in 25 and 7 countries, respectively. including Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, China, Colombia, There were 53 publications and 13 network papers of a Costa Rica, Namibia, Peru, Ukraine, and Zambia. thematic or regional nature. The country-specific World However, World Bank involvement in pension reform Bank reports evaluating pension strategy range from those is not limited to lending or the production of formal strictly addressing pension reform issues, such as for the reports. The World Bank is also committed to activities in Philippines and China, to country economic reports and the area of knowledge management. It has held informa- S()CIAL l'R OTE CTIO)N S EEC'P'OR S'l'RA'I EGY tional seminars in China, for example, organized study tance, as follows: East Asia and the Pacific (EAP)-three tours for Koreans, arranged for technical assistance operations; Sub-Saharan Africa (AFR)-three operations; through consultant trust funds in Latvia,2 and provided and Middle East and North Africa (MENA)-two training on the Pension Reform Options Simulation operations. With the exception of two fairly "pure" Toolkit (PROST) pension model (Box Al) to partici- pension reform projects in China, these have generally pants from Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, the Philippines, been financial sector or adjustment operations with Ecuador, Brazil, Russia, and Thailand, among many other pension components. countries. Some countries have asked the World Bank to Although most loans in all regions have been for struc- provide informal assistance or conduct evaluations of tural or sectoral adjustment, the World Bank did finance their pension systems that resulted only in the production some early technical assistance and investment projects', of an aide memoire. Out of headquarters, the World Bank and over time the movement of World Bank clients has offered multiple conferences (most recently the toward multipillar reforms created chances tO focus conference "New Ideas about Old-Age Security"), a yearly adjustment loans more directly on pension reform. Harvard Institute for International Development/World Multipillar reforms generally involve a full or partial Bank Institute workshop on pension reform in diversion of contribution revenue away from the public Cambridge, a core course on pensions, and the pension pay-as-you-go system toward the funded second pillar. primer (Box A. 1). Meanwhile, government must honor commitments to current pensioners and those near retirement. Since LENDING FOR PENSION REFORM pension reform usually takes place when the system is The World Bank has made 70 loans to 36 countries already running deficits, even full contributions are not during the past 15 years in which the entire loan, or a enough to cover expenditures. In a well-designed reform, component, financed pension reform activities. The total once current pensioners (and those soon to retire) have amount of these loans was almost US$7.5 billion, with passed out of the system, the system should achieve approximately US$3.4 billion5 devoted to pension reform. balance, requiring no further government intervention. The loans include 38 structural and sectoral adjustment Therefore, in this case, pension reform fits the classic operations (which promote policy reform), 8 investment investment model, where the country increases current projects (involving, for example, acquisition of equipment, expenditure to gain benefits in the future (a reduction in training, institutional strengthening, contracting of government costs). At this time, the country can call on services, etc.), 22 cases of technical assistance (normally in World Bank lending to help cover the initial expendi- support of adjustment or investment project implementa- tures, with the reduction in future government payments tion), and two new "Learning and Innovation Loans" providing the resources to repay the loan. (designed to create greater flexibility in use of resources). The first World Bank adjustment loan based purely Since pension reform has taken on a different character on pension reform took place in December 1996 to in the various regions, so has World Bank involvement in Argentina, quickly followed by operations in Mexico, support of the reform efforts. The World Bank's first Peru, Uruguay, and Kazakhstan. The Argentine loan was loans with pension components supported four structural a follow-up operation to the main pension reform, which adjustment and technical assistance operations in involved the cessation of special schemes for civil Panama, Costa Rica, and Uruguay in the mid-1980s. servants in the provinces and their incorporation into the Since then, there have been an additional 23 loans in the primary public system. Since the provincial pension Latin America and Caribbean region (LAC). The transi- funds were mostly in deficit and the civil servants chose tion from planned to market economies in Eastern to divert some of their contributions to defined-contri- Europe and the Former Soviet Union has provided ample bution, individual accounts, the government faced a opportunities for pension reform, with a total of 35 oper- large fiscal burden. The benefit came from the reductioii ations financed by the World Bank since 1990. These in the provincial deficits and the ability to constrain started with structural adjustment loans in Poland and future liabilities. The Mexican loan helped finance tran- Hungary and a labor market adjustment and social sition costs and improve the regulatory framework for protection investment project in the Russian Federation. the funded pillar. In Peru, the project loan attempted to The other regions have been much less active in pension improve the efficiency of capital markets and allow for reform and have requested less World Bank lending assis- the earmarking of privatization proceeds to cover ANNEX ONE * A ORLD BAN\K INVOLVEM V-NT IN PENSION REFORM pension obligations. The project in Uruguay fostered pension to a defined benefit. But, in many of the World increased efficiency among the second pillar pension Bank's client countries, annuities are available only at fund administrators and promoted the development of extremely high prices or nor at all. Some of this may be the private securities market. Kazakhstan's reform loan due to adverse selection, where only the individuals follows the classic investment approach described above expecting to live long lives choose to purchase annuities, and will help finance the transition from a PAYG to a which raises their price, or due to other factors, such as fully funded system. tax treatment of annuity income. The World Bank's studies related to this topic attempt to determine why LOOKING FORWARD annuities are not being provided and look for optimal The World Bank continually faces new challenges in the ways of organizing annuities markets. implementation of multipillar pension reform because of Another key topic of investigation is that of adminis- the relatively recent nature of the concept and the World trative costs. In the limited sample of countries in xvhich Bank's position as a leader in the field. In this regard, the defined contribution systems have been implemented, World Bank is committed to helping clients and has administrative costs in the new systems have been high undertaken an active role in terms of research, production and have severely limited net rates of return. The studies of implementation guidelines, and brokering academic thus attempt to determine the reasons for this situation and policy advice for clients). and propose a way to improve it. In this way, the World While the shift from PAYG, defined benefit schemes Bank's clients will get access to the best risk management toward fully funded, defined contribution schemes at lowest cost. removes labor market distortions, the limited experience There is also increasing interest in the political to date has shown no substantial movement of labor from economy of reform, for which the evidence and analysis the informal to the formal market. Furthermore, in the are still in their infancy. The available results provide some notional account reforms, which should also improve guidance for policymakers and the World Bank, but they labor market performance, revenue collection has actually cannot really answer the two main questions: what starts a fallen in some cases. From the social risk management pension reform, and what makes it successful? While the point of view, this leaves substantial portions of the popu- rising number of pension reforms undertaken worldwide lation to deal with old age and disability risk through enhances the information pool and the possibility to informal mechanisms that may not be uniformly available discriminate better among competing hypotheses, more to all people, such as relying on family. The World Bank is data and more research are clearly required. promoting studies to determine xvho is not covered and Finally, as client countries face challenges in the field of why. It can then help design policies to either increase pension reform, they generate a series of other topics for coverage or offer noncontributory schemes to allow better continued investigation. These include civil servant risk management for the uncovered. pension reform, gender and distributional impact, public Longevity risk, the risk that an individual in retirement pension fund governance, and fiscal sustainability issues will live longer than expected, is fully covered by a PAYG with notional accounts. Civil servant pension reform system. However, under a defined contribution system, if deals not only with old age and disability risk manage- the pension is paid in lump sum, the risk is borne by the ment for civil servants, but also with evaluating whether individual. One means of avoiding the risk is through the the design of the civil service pension system involves purchase of an annuity, in which case the provider of the such heavy subsidies from the government that it annuity, an insurance company or a public pension fund, precludes other government assistance in social risk bears the risk, converting the defined contribution management. N I IS FR' IM AN N i X ON \I 1 See Holzmann, R. (2000): "The World Bank Approach to Pension Reform," International Social Security Review 53(1): 11-34. 2 This type of activity often does not lead to lending or the production of a report. s ( I AI IRIR( I IN ( 1 ( [I( C I R TI A I 1O(N)' NOTES FROM ANNEX ONE CONTINUED 3 Since most adjustment loans and even some investment loans do not specify the values associated with the different components or policy reform measures, this figure represents a rough estimate. It generally assumes that the typical adjustment loan involving pensions dedicated around 10% to pension reform. When the number of policy reform areas was specified, the estimate for any single component simply resulted from the total loan value divided by the number of components. 4 In the mid-1990s there were three technical assistance loans to LAC countries and four investment loans to ECA countries concentrating mainly on infrastructural inputs required to accomplish administrative improvements. 5 For the results of a research conference on "New Ideas About Old-Age Security" in September 1999, jointly sponsored by the Social Protection Unit and the Development Economics Vice-Presidency, see Holzmann and Stiglitz, eds. (2001): New Ideas About Old-Age Security, World Bank, Washington, D.C. (forthcoming). 59 ANNEX ONE * WORLD BANK INVOLVE.MENT IN PENSION REFORMf REGIONAL RESEARCH, ANALYTICAL AND ADVISORY ACTIVITIES, AND KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT World Bank staff have carried out research and analytical work over the years to provide the underpinning for World Bank-financed projects as well as knowledge to client countries and the global development community. The Development Economics Vice Presidency has undertaken research on labor markets, pensions, and social assistance for more than two decades. The network anchors (especially for social protection and poverty) generate and disseminate other knowledge products (often thematic or regional in nature) and offer additional services to clients. The World Bank Institute promotes skills and technical capacity building among World Bank staff and clients in areas of social protection. Finally, the World Bank regional units produce the work that is perhaps most directly applicable to operations. This Annex focuses on the main nonlending products and activities of the regions and the linkages between these and the lending portfolio. EAST ASIA AND THE PACIFIC nonlending services). The World Bank's EastAsia: The Rapid economic growth in many countries in the East Road to Recovery report and sequell undertook a compre- Asia and Pacific region (EAP) and a tradition of strong hensive assessment of the crisis, and the Asia-Europe informal (family- and community-based) safety nets gave Meeting (ASEM)-European Union (EU) Financial Crisis governments little incentive to plan for downside risks. As Response Fund (ASEM Trust Fund) and Policy and a result, formal provision of social protection remained Human Resources Development Grants allowed for the much less common in EAP countries than in those with development of 19 more specific inputs. These included similar income levels in other regions. Part of the govern- seven country and thematic studies on labor markets, five ments' reluctance to establish extensive public social on safety nets, three on pensions, and four on cross- protection interventions resulted from the perception that cutting issues. The recent conference, "Labor Markets in they would replace informal mechanisms, create depen- the East Asia Crisis: Applied Analysis and Policy dency, and produce a drag on economic growth. Much of Workshop," examined the effects of the crisis on labor the World Bank's work on social protection in the EAP markets and policies used to address it. region has emerged since the region's financial crisis in Before the crisis, the World Bank's social protection 1997 and has concentrated on the area of social safety portfolio in the region emphasized labor markets above nets. Several countries sought urgent assistance, including other areas, mainly as a function of country preferences. both Korea and Malaysia, which had previously gradu- Support for pension reform has been limited, although ated from World Bank borrowing. The World Bank put economic and sector work has taken on the issue in together "emergency" adjustment packages for Indonesia, China, Mongolia, and the Philippines. Interest in social Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand. Although investment funds is increasing, with projects in a large basis of analytical work did not exist before the Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao People's Democratic Republic crisis, the World Bank helped fill the gap while planning (PDR), the Philippines, and Thailand. Despite this trend, responsive measures (See Box B. 1 on Korea, which offers poverty assessments for the EAP countries are generally an example of close alignment between lending and outdated. An exception is Thailand, where the 1996 B O X B.1 Philippines and Thailand-are becoming more concerned with the financial sustainability of their PAYG social secu- KOREA-KNOWLEDGE INFORMING ACTION rity systems, and the same holds true for the transition FOR INTEGRATED SOCIAL PROTECTION economies of China, Mongolia, and Vietnam, in which state-owned enterprises have encountered difficulties The Bank approved an emergency adjustment loan in meeting their obligations. Social safety nets have assumed 1997 and two structural adjustment loans in 1998 for greater significance after the crisis in the emerging market Korea. The loans depended in part on introduction of economies, and social funds are catching on in both an integrated social policy agenda. In addition to emerging market and transition couiitries. So far, [he financing measures to protect pro-poor social expendi- small market economies have done very little to develop tures and the unemployed, the lending program formal social protection interventions, but they face a included the following actions to upgrade the country's growing challenge in terms of youth unemployment. In social protection system over the long term: sum, the region bears a large agenda for social protection work, and future advisory and analytical work will likely * Strengthening the information base for poverty reflect these subregional priorities. monitoring and targeting; * Improving the unemployment insurance system and EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA related labor market monitoring mechanisms; and Prior to the 1990s, most of the current countries in * Reforming the pension and health insurance systems. Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia were not members of the World Bank (except for Yugoslavia, The social policy agenda has received support both Romania, Hungary after 1982, and Poland after 1986). within the framework of the Structural Adjustment The World Bank's work on social protection issues in the Lending and through technical assistance and other region was sporadic and related mainly to labor markets non-lending services. The ASEM program has funded a and social expenditures, normally in the context of 62 range of proposals for analytical work on the Korean macroeconomic analysis (that is, Country Economic situation. Finally, a Country Assistance Strategy (CAS) Memoranda). This situation changed dramatically in the under preparation sets out the planned lending and early 1990s with the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the non-lending activities and their sequencing within a entrance of new client countries into the World Bank, strategic framework. and the gradual transition of their economies from central planning to market orientations. The transition spurred the adoption of a new approach toward social protection, poverty assessment used empirical data to evaluate which in turn necessitated the restructuring of arrange- antipoverty programs and suggested their reorientation to ments and institutions.2 achieve better results. Currently, World Bank staff are Given that the cornerstone of social protection strategy preparing poverty updates for Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao under the socialist system was full employment, the PDR, and Papua New Guinea. market-oriented transition had rapid and dramatic effects To a certain extent, the approach toward social protec- on labor markets, and much of the World Bank's analyt- tion among World Bank client countries in the region has ical work in the region has focused on this area. Several differed at a general level according to the following types of country-specific reports have addressed labor groups: emerging market economies (Indonesia, Korea, market issues: early Social Sector Reports (for example, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand); transition Hungary and Romania), Country Economic Memoranda economies (Cambodia, China, Lao PDR, Mongolia, and (for example, Slovak Republic), and stand-alone labor Vietnam); and small market economies (Papua New market studies (for example, Belarus, Estonia, Guinea and the Pacific Islands). Labor market issues have Kazakhstan, Russian Federation, Slovenia, and been of special interest to both the emerging market and Yugoslavia). Complementary regional studies-the most transition economies because of the continuous need to important of which was perhaps Labor Markets and Social protect the vulnerable, which the crisis intensified, and Policy in Ceneral and Eastern Europe 3-allowed for a the problems posed by redundant labor in the transition. comparative perspective. Papers in the Social Challenges of Some of the emerging market economies-Korea, the Transition series4 quantitatively evaluated early transition ,>(1: I A I'PR(1 II(: I l(lN '1:(1 (!I R S1 R RAI I :(,Y developments relating to labor market efficiency (such as nets compared to their reform of labor markets and social wage flexibility, hiring and firing restrictions, and collec- insurance. This is largely a consequence of the fact that tive bargaining) and social protection measures for the the socialist system largely precluded development of the unemployed. Many of these sector work pieces used full array of market-style safety net structures. The World Bank-sponsored household surveys (for example, government used extensive subsidies on goods and the Former Yugoslav Republic (FYR) of Macedonia, services to ensure the maintenance of basic needs, Romania, and Russia), in which case the local institutions provided cash and in-kind benefits for certain vulnerable often benefited from capacity building in this activity. groups, and emphasized residential care for groups In some cases there has been close alignment of sector outside the rubric of normal life. The dismantling of the work, a consistent policy dialogue, and subsequent subsidy system, especially in the Eastern European coun- lending. Adjustment operations in Bulgaria, FYR tries, combined with increased unemployment and Macedonia, and the Russian Federation gained support poverty, neglect of residential institutions, or the signifi- from previous or simultaneous investment loans. The cant arrears in cash and in-kind benefits in the Eurasian coordination between a technical assistance project and a countries, has meant that social safety nets deserve poverty study in FYR Macedonia provides an example of increasing attention. how solid analytical work informed the adjustment The emergency character of protecting the poor during lending that followed. transition has frequently determined the nature of World In addition to guaranteed employment, under the Bank action in terms of safety nets. This has produced socialist system the transition countries provided some situations involving a lack of coordination and generous retirement security to workers through fiscally optimal sequencing among research and lending activi- unsustainable PAYG systems. The deterioration of these ties. For example, adjustment interventions have preceded arrangements under the transition (reflected in a rising the preparation of poverty assessments, which would have system dependency ratio resulting from early retirement, provided an important empirical underpinning for policy evasion, out migration of labor, greater unemployment planning. Still, in some cases, the country and World and continued population aging) brought urgency to the Bank have made the best of the circumstances. For 63 need for reform. As a result, the World Bank has assisted example, in 1998 the World Bank funded a sector invest- with the evaluation of problems and reform options. ment loan in Larvia with the objective of improving the There have been at least 17 official economic and sector social security delivery system, especially in terms of work reports addressing pension issues in the region, as creating alternatives to institutionalization. Several analyt- well as many other World Bank publications, demon- ical inputs of interest to program design, including an strating a level of activity comparable to that in the Latin assessment of the Latvian social assistance system and America and Caribbean region. Pension issues often reform, became available only after project implementa- surfaced initially in public expenditure review documents tion had begun. However, even though the operational and made up part of adjustment lending packages, to activities did not follow an initial poverty assessment and which specific pension reform investment operations sector work, the World Bank used ongoing analytical provided quick followup. Only four Europe and Central work to improve the project under execution. Asia countries have marginal or no relations at all with The most frequent World Bank reports useful to the the World Bank regarding pension reform: Belarus, social safety net area are poverty assessments, which can Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Yugoslavia. The ECA feed into both policy oriented (adjustment) operations region organized several seminars and conferences, and specific investment projects: for example, social including an innovative conference in Vienna in 1998 investment funds, which countries of the region are in which Central and Eastern European reformers facili- rapidly adopting (such as Albania, Armenia, Bulgaria, tated knowledge transfer to policymakers from the Georgia, Moldova, Romania, and Tajikistan). Based on Commonwealth of Independent States. In the ECA successful projects, the region established the ECA region, the World Bank also agreed in some cases to network of social funds, which helps countries exchange temporarily assign its staff to the governments, if information, especially regarding best practices. requested, to accelerate the transfer of knowledge. Romania provides an especially positive example Until now ECA countries have done relatively less of comprehensive social protection and safety net with regard to the redesign (or creation) of social safety programming based on previous analysis. The 1996-97 ANNEX TWO * REGIONAL RESEARCH, ANALYTICAL. AND ADVISORY ACTIVITIES. AND KNOWLEDGE MANAGENMENT poverty assessment contributed to the preparation of the has become increasingly involved in de-institutionaliza- following projects: a quick-disbursing Social Protection tion, welfare, and human rights issues, particularly among Adjustment Loan (US$50 million) intended to improve children. Initial efforts in Romania are now being the social safety net, including cash and in-kind benefit expanded into countries such as Bulgaria, Lithuania, and programs (June 1997); an investment loan focusing on even Russia. social services for children, including innovative initiatives to help street children and reduce institutionalization LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN through creation of incentives for home and foster Despite differences in socioeconomic development, coun- care; and a Social Investment Fund Loan (January 1999). tries of the Latin America and Caribbean region face a This follows other safety net work, including the World number of common general challenges in social protec- Banks technical assistance to the Ministry of Labor tion and have sought some similar solutions. The and Social Protection in the Technical Assistance and countries have sizeable (and growing) informal labor Critical Imports Loan (1991) and sector work (1992) markets (57 percent of workers in 1995 on average, up that fed into the Employment and Social Protection from 52 percent in 1990), increasing poverty (34-37 Project (1995). percent of the population of the region in the period In Bulgaria, a Poverty Assessment undertaken in June 1986-96), and very unequal income and asset distribu- 1999 found incredibly high rates of poverty among tions (Gini in the range of 0.4 to 0.6; on average the certain disadvantaged ethnic groups such as the Roma. highest for any region). Also, some countries have felt the Initially, the government was defensive on this issue, but shocks of recent financial and monetary crises (for the dialogue has subsequently led to the development of example, balance of payments and exchange rate) and an Institutional Development Fund Grant on Ethnic volatility in foreign investment and private capital flows. Integration (2000), spurred regional analysis on Roma Governments have normally established a full range of issues (which in turn resulted in a seminal report on the social protection programs, which have experienced issue for the Prague 2000 meetings), and has contributed similar difficulties that led to reform. Some countries 64 to World Bank work on child welfare and the reform of have been attempting to ease regulation in the formal the social assistance system. Sometimes, the linkage has sector labor market, which has historically driven growth been reversed, and good operations have given rise to in the informal sector. Fiscal unsustainability of public sound analytical work and policy advice. A case in point is pension schemes has contributed to widespread experi- Bulgaria, where the Social Insurance Administration mentation with reform, much of which has followed the Project (1995) not only prepared the foundations to multipillar model. Low coverage and inequity from the implement a multipillar pension reform, but supported continued existence of special arrangements for public the development of the government's analytical capacity sector workers in many countries represent some of the to design it, leading to the development of the Social unresolved issues in this sector. The region was the first to Protection Adjustment Loan in 1998. implement the social investment fund model both as a Good data are always highly sought after, particularly response to the period of structural adjustment and then when they enable cross-country analysis. A major effort as an efficient means to finance and deliver social infra- has been made through the Social Challenges of structure investments. The social investment funds built Transition (SCIl) to compile comparable data on the upon or complemented previously existing safety net social sectors throughout all ECA countries. This database programs (mainly in-kind transfer and public employ- has also been linked to the UNICEF Transmonee data- ment schemes). base, thereby facilitating comparative analysis within the Economic and sector work in the region related to the international donor community, amongst academics and labor market includes structural reform, unemployment, within the client country governments. downsizing and public sector reform, gender, wages and Child welfare has recently become a major new area in poverty, and training. The performance of labor markets, which analytical work is bolstering innovative operations effects of reform, and prospects for improvements are in tackling complex social and developmental problems. fundamental areas of investigation.5 Given the persistent Following the 1999 study "Moving from Residential problem of unemployment in some economies, especially Institutions to Community-Based Services in Eastern in the Caribbean, early country economic memoranda Europe and the Former Soviet Union," the World Bank and economic reports often addressed this issue (for SOCIAI PROTFCTION S1oFroR STRAIEGY example, "Trinidad and Tobago-Report on (Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Employment," 1973; "Barbados-Economic Salvador, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Peru, and Memorandum," 1986; "Panama-Special Economic Uruguay); it has produced at least 16 economic and Report: Metropolitan Unemployment," 1982). The sector work reports and some 23 regional or country- quality of public administration and governance, which specific papers covering diverse aspects of pension reform. relates to public sector reform, downsizing, and rational- In many countries, second-generation reforms are now on ization, has been a prominent concern in the region, as the agenda to address issues such as low coverage-on reflected in economic and sector work and analytical average, the systems cover only 38 percent of the econom- reports (especially from the Poverty Reduction and ically active population and provide pensions to about 31 Economic Management sector and the Human percent of the population over age 60-and problems Development sector). Consideration of gender issues in caused by regulations on pension fund managers that the labor markets has become increasingly mainstreamed have produced segmented financial markets, high (for example, "Women's Work, Education, and Family commercialization costs, and insufficient choice for the Welfare in Peru," 1991; "El Salvador-Moving to a beneficiaries. Gender Approach: Issues and Recommendations," The LAC region has a long history of providing safety 1996)! Some of the poverty assessments and studies nets to the poor. The World Bank has conducted analysis completed during the 1990s for countries in LAC of social assistance in country economic and sector work, concentrated on the link between poverty and wages- poverty assessments, and special regional studies. In fact, for example, "The Brazilian Labor Market in the 1980s," as a general rule, when there is a poverty assessment for a 1993; and "Bolivia-Poverty, Equity and Income: Selected given country, it is more likely that the country assistance Policies for Expanding Earning Opportunities for the strategy will have a significant poverty orientation. Poor," 1996. Although worker-training programs are Assessments that contain a detailed poverty profile and scarce or nonexistent in most countries of the region relevant policy analysis have the greatest influence on because of government fiscal constraints and lack of lending.' Employment schemes or public works programs incentives for private sector firms, in a few countries they and in-kind benefit transfers have received considerable 65 are quite extensive and have been the subject of analysis World Bank support in the region, and they have been (for example, Trinidad and Tobago and Mexico). the subject of comprehensive study and cross-country The most significant area of unfunded fiscal liabilities evaluation." The social investment fund approach origi- in LAC has been the social security system. Relaxed nated in the region in Bolivia in 1986, and most LAC enforcement of contribution payments and mismanage- countries adopted it over time. Some countries are already ment of reserves compounded the basic imbalance in the fourth generation of World Bank-funded social between contributions and benefit payouts. The fiscal funds projects, making this region the clear leader in unsustainability of this situation encouraged extensive terms of the application of this instrument. Not surpris- reforms in the region-it has been the most aggressive ingly, much of the evaluatory work on social investment reformer, next to the ECA region-starting with Chile funds has concentrated on LAC, given its depth and in 1981, which replaced its public pay-as-you-go scheme range of experiences."' with a system of privately managed, fully funded individual accounts. More than one-third of the 23 MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA reforms were multipillar in nature. All of the following During the oil boom, high economic growth rates and countries, in addition to Chile, adopted some type of oil revenues allowed governments in the Middle East and multipillar reform: Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, North Africa region countries to establish a wide array of El Salvador, Mexico, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. social protection mechanisms. In labor markets, govern- Reforms in Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Guatemala should ments often used public employment as a means of occur this fiscal year, and Brazil may undertake some supporting social welfare-for example, public sector reforms, although they are likely to be parametric employment was as high as 59 percent in Algeria and 47 rather than multipillar. percent in Jordan in 1995. Almost universally, they also The World Bank has supported these efforts through created large vocational education and training lending, analytical, and advisory services. It has made 27 programs. The main program and policy interventions in loans involving pension reform to countries of the region terms of safety nets have involved public works, micro- ANNEN r\Xye * REC ICONAL RESEAR(-II, ANALIN' I CAI AND ADVISORY AC I VITI ES, AND RN OWLFDGD MANAG EMENT credit and microenterprise, general food subsidies Old-age income protection has been the subject of (although some countries have reduced them substan- relatively less analysis and intervention, partly as a result tially in recent years, such as Yemen, or replaced them of the region's young population structure. Until now, with targeted safety net schemes, such as Jordan and there have been two loans relating to pension reform: Algeria), cash, and in-kind transfers. Pay-as-you-go Morocco-Contractual Development Savings Loan Project public pension systems cover 20-50 percent of the labor (1998); and Tunisia-Economic and Financial Reforms force. Although the region still has a young demographic Support Loan Project (1991). Recently the World Bank structure, pension reform is on the agenda due to prob- approved an Institutional Development Fund project for lems presented by financial sustainability, poor design, Tunisia to help launch the reform of the social security and management. These problems include loose eligi- system (pension and health insurance). World Bank bility, weak benefit-contribution link, benefit rates that policy papers and sector and economic reports covering are too high, and poor returns on reserves. pension issues include "Egypt-Country Economic Much of the World Bank's assistance to the region in Memorandum: Issues in Sustaining Economic Growth," the social protection sector has been in the area of labor 1997; "Options for Pension Reform in Tunisia," 1993; markets, including vocational and technical education. and "Tunisia's Insurance Sector," 1995. Country economic memoranda and sector reports have The future pipeline for lending and nonlending activi- frequently concenitrated on the problems of declining ties is weak because governments in the MENA region levels of employment and household income, occasioned still give fairly low priority to social protection, especially in part by reduced economic growth and employment for borrowing. Moreover, some sector work, originally generation, continued rapid population growth, and scheduled for FY01, has been delayed because of recent declines in worker remittances (in countries with signifi- budgetary cuts (Tunisia-labor market and unemployment cant migration).'' Many projects approved during the past study; Iran-social safety net study). Future work should 10 years relate either directly to employment (for involve a pension study for West Bank and Gaza (FY01). example, the Algeria Rural Employment Project) or incor- Upcoming lending activities include Morocco-Social 66 porate a labor market component-the latter type of Fund Project (FY01) and Djibouti-Pension Reform, as a project constitutes the majority. Sector work has begun component of the Structural Adjustment Credit (FY02). to directly handle the issue of reform of the vocational and technical education sector (for example, SOUTH ASIA Iran-Education, Training and the Labor Markets), and The fundamental development challenge facing the there are several active projects in this area (for example, South Asia region is alleviating deep and widespread Jordan-Training and Employment Support Project; poverty, in part through the application of instruments Lebanon-Vocational and Technical Education Project; of social risk management. Around 70-75 percent of Tunisia-Second Training and Employment Project; the total population lives in rural areas, and many, Republic of Yemen-Vocational Training Project; and being poor, are vulnerable to even marginal income Morocco-Private Sector Development III). fluctuations. Vulnerability and poverty combine to Other economic and sector work and projects relate to foster insecurity. A domestic calamity (such as a bread- poverty reduction and safety net provision. The World winner's illness or death) or a community-wide scourge Bank produced poverty reports for several countries over (drought, flood, or crop failure, for instance) can the past few years (Jordan, 1994; Morocco, 1994; Tunisia, quickly erase the hard-won gains of individuals striving 1995; Yemen, 1996; and Algeria, 1999), has completed to overcome poverty. poverty updates for Jordan (2000), Morocco (2000), A very strong correlate of poverty and vulnerability in and Tunisia (2000), and is preparing a poverty' note for the region is the fact that a large majority of the workers Lebanon (2001). It completed a regional study on are in the informal sector, where they find mainly subsis- Consumer Food Subsidies (1999) and a Regional tence employment and are exposed to high risks of Social Protection Strategy, which it will disseminate unemployment. The risks of unemployment and under- within the Region (2000/2001). In 1999, the Bank employment and their linkage to poverty have made the prepared a social protection strategy note for Algeria labor market a primary concern for government. Adding and is in the process of producing a similar note for to the attention received by the labor market are the Morocco (2000)." issues of core labor standards and child labor. ,(WI \1 I'RO!I :(: I I(1\ SE' 1J R S I RA l FG\ In this context, it is not surprising that much of the in microfinance link participants with market institutions World Bank's analytical and advisory work in the region and enable them to make optimum use of resources. has historically concentrated on the labor market. Some Recently, there has also been a move toward extending the early reports included: "Bangladesh-Raising the Level of scope of microfinance beyond credit, and into providing Output and Employment in Small Scale Industry," 1973; saving and insurance services among the vulnerable poor, "Poverty and Unemployment in India: AII Analysis of using similar group-based mechanisms deviscd at the Recent Evidence," 1980; "Public Policy and the community level. Some experiments on this front are Evolution of the Labour Market in Sri Lanka," 1986; occurring in South Asia, and researchers both within and "Small Farmers and the Landless in South Asia," 1979; outside the Bank have started analyzing the potential of and "The Evolution of Labor Markets in India," 1981. such efforts. More recent reports have looked at labor market policies Formal safety nets like public pension schemes in the for higher employment in Bangladesh, labor retrench- region reach only a small portion of the population and ment among state-owned enterprises and unemployment represent a comparatively less pressing priority in the face in Sri Lanka, returns to human capital in Pakistan's rural of other social protection issues. Governments have wage labor market, and poverty reduction and gender solicited little assistance from the World Bank in terms of differences in the labor market in India. The World pension reform. This will likely appear on the agenda Bank's (relatively small) social protection portfolio in the soon, however, probably first in countries such as India region has also emphasized projects with employment and Sri Lanka. generation components, often in rural areas. Upcoming work on vulnerability in the region will Government safety net programs designed to mitigate include an empirical analysis, based on panel data from and cope with the risks of unemployment and other Pakistan, which will attempt to measure vulnerability and broader categories of risk have involved public works, track its indicators. Developing a satisfactory measure of subsidies, and, to a limited extent, direct transfer vulnerability along with its indicators will help in programs. Public works programs have met with reason- designing interventions that explicitly address the issue of able success while credit subsidies, food transfer and price risk, with the objective of mitigating and coping with support programs have encountered more difficulties due risk. This work will be a part of the broader agenda of the to their sometimes distortionary nature and benefits Poverty Assessment of Pakistan that the South Asia leakage. Public works programs like Maharashtra's Region staff of the World Bank plans to complete by the Employment Guarantee Scheme in India, which have end of the year 2001. met with considerable success, have been analyzed in some detail by a number of Bank studies. The World SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA Bank has long held an interest in short-term employment As in South Asia, the social protection issues in the Sub- projects in the region ("Rural Works Program in South Saharan Africa region relate fundamentally to entrenched Asia," 1978, and "Reaching the Rural Poor through poverty and vulnerability to natural shocks, such as Public Employment: Arguments, Evidence and Lessons drought and famine. Moreover, the region has contended from South Asia," 1991) and has examined the use of with slow economic growth, macroeconomic shocks, war labor-intensive means of road construction. It has studied and civil conflict, epidemic disease (mainly AIDS), and India's public distribution system and the ability of its extensive child labor. Given the limited public budgets social service system to reach the poor. and scope for transfer-based safety nets and the young Financial intermediation has also been popular, and populations of African countries, social assistance and the region has pioneered positive experiences in the area pension programs have not been as significant as labor of microcredit. A World Bank study"- reports that, as of market programs. 1997, there were 98 microfinance institutions that had World Bank attention to labor market issues has US$900 million in 2.8 million outstanding loans, out of encompassed a range of topics. Several recent regional which the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh alone provided reports have looked at pay and employment reform 74 percent of all loans to its 2.1 million clients. Credit (privatization and retrenchment) in the public sector. programs and rural poverty, especially in Bangladesh and Other topics have included labor-based methods for roads India, have been an important area of research by the works, aspects of employment (Ghana, C6te d'lvoire, World Bank. By providing credit, successful experiments Malawi), child labor (Ghana, C6te d'Ivoire) and training ANNEX TWO * REGIONAL RESEARCH, ANALYTICAL AND ADVISORY ACTIVI T'IES, AND KNOW LFDGE MANAGEMENT (Zimbabwc). The World Bank has also financed projects The region has the youngest population profile in the in public works and emplovment (Burkina Faso, Gambia, world, and pension systems reach only a small segment of Mali, Niger, Senegal) and training (Madagascar, Kenya). the labor market, mainly the public formal sector. Analytical and advisory activities relating to social Although structuring and reforming pension systems has safetv nets have emphasized community consultations and not been a priority, the issue of old-age care is assuming institutional analysis of local nongovernmental organiza- greater importance, especially considering the phenom- tions (for example, Ethiopia and Nigeria). The World enon of skip-generation households formed when income Bank has financed operations in social action or post- earners die due to AIDS. Children and adolescents can conflict recovery in several countries (including Angola, provide certain types of assistance to the elderly but are Burundi, Chad, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Madagascar, Malawi, unable to fill the gap in terms of income generation. and Zambia) and food security projects in others (Madagascar and Rwanda). NO , F.OS E R M NN FIX T'W) 1 World Bank (1998): East Asia: The Road to Recovery, World Bank (2000): East Asia: Recovery and Beyond. 2 The countries of the region fall into two main groups, European and Eurasian, which differ in terms of initial conditions at the start of transition and the path of reform followed during the 1990s. For example, the European countries generally had better institutional and administrative capacity, experienced lower declines in GDP, and undertook more aggressive reform in areas of social protection. Still, both groups face the basic common problems posed by the transition, and this section does not develop sharp distinctions between the two groups. 3 Barr, N., ed. (1994): Labor Markets and Social Policy in Central and Eastern Europe: The Transition and Beyond, New York: Oxford University Press. 4 See, for example, Allison, C. and D. Ringold (1996): Labor Markets in Transition in Central and Eastern Europe: 1989-1995, World Bank Technical Paper No. WTP 362, Social Challenges of Transition Series, World Bank, Washington, D.C.; Rutkowski, J. J. (1995): Changes in the Wage Structure During Economic Transition in Central and Eastern Europe, World Bank Technical Paper No. WTP 340, Social Challenges of Transition Series, World Bank, Washington, D.C. 68 b An example of a comprehensive look at the field is: Guasch, J. (1999): LaborMarketReform and Job Creation: The UnfinishedAgenda in Latin America and Caribbean Countries, The World Bank, Finance, Private Sector, and Infrastructure, Washington, D.C. 6 Also, see Psacharopolous, G. and C. Winter (1992): "Women's Employment and Pay in Latin America,' Finance and Development, A Quarterly Publication of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, 29. 7 For example: Grosh, M. (1994): Administering Targeted Social Programs in Latin America: From Platitudes to Practice, Regional and Sectoral Studies, The World Bank; Subbarao, K. and others (1997): Safety Net Programs and Poverty Reduction: Lessons from Cross-Country Experience, The World Bank; Baker, J. (1997): "Poverty Reduction and Human Development in the Caribbean: A Cross-Country Study," World Bank Discussion Paper No. WDP 366; de Ferranti, D., G.E. Perry, l.S. Gill, and L. Serven (2000): Securing Our Future in a Global Economy, The World Bank. 8 Dayton, J,. A. Khan, H. Ribe, M. Schneider (1993): "Country Policies for Poverty Reduction-A Review of Poverty Assessments, Education, and Social Policy," Department Discussion Paper Series No. 15, The World Bank. 9 Baker, J. (2000): Evaluating the Poverty Impact of Projects: A Handbook for Practitioners, The World Bank. 10 See, for example: Glaessner, R, et al. (1994): "Poverty Alleviation and Social Investment Funds: The Latin American Experience." World Bank Discussion Paper No. 261; Subbarao op cit. chapter 6; Rawlings, L., L. Sherburne-Benz, and J. Van Domelen (2000): "Evaluating Social Fund Performance Across Countries: Recent Findings and Impact Evaluation Results." World Bank draft report. Processed. 11 Examples include: "Morocco-Country Economic Memorandum: Towards Higher Growth and Employment," (1995); "Growing Faster, Finding Jobs: Choices for Morocco," (publication, 1996); "Egypt-Country Economic Memorandum: Issues in Sustaining Economic Growth," (1997); "Jordan-Issues of Employment and Labor Market Imbalances," (1986); "Jordan-Efficiency and Equity of Government Revenues and Social Expenditures," (1986). 12 The World Bank finances social investment funds in several countries (Algeria, Egypt, West Bank and Gaza, and Yemen). Program priorities differ depending on country circumstances. Also, Yemen has an IDA- financed public works program, and Morocco has a World Bank-financed social priority project that supports public works. In addition, an IDA credit is supporting an innovative "child disability/youth-at-risk project" in Egypt. 13 Fidler, P, and J. Paxton (1997): "An Inventory of Microfinance Institutions in South Asia," Sustainable Banking with the Poor project, World Bank, Washington, D.C. A: A I l'R) 1 1 ( IO)N NRI- I (IR S I RA I RG(Y A Nrn e e APPLICATION OF THE SOCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT MATRIX TO WORLD REGIONS Through the use of the social risk management matrix (Chapter 2), this section compares the present status of social risk management arrangements and strategies in the world regions and the potential for improving them. The regions are grouped in some cases to facilitate comparison. EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA AND EAST these countries, and governments have often consciously ASIA AND THE PACIFIC undermined informal mechanisms, including Countries in the ECA and EAP regions broadly share a family structures. similar income level but have very different social risk This situation sharply contrasts with that of many management provisions. countries in the EAP region (except the transition During the era of central planning, social risk manage- economies of China and Indochina, which share many ment in ECA countries consisted mainly of risk features with ECA countries). Informal mechanisms, 69 prevention through public institutions (public ownership mostly in the form of extended family relations, play the of the means of production, quantity planning, price most important role in risk management in EAP, setting, trade monopoly, and an absence of financial supported by relatively wide access to financial assets and markets). There was some risk mitigation through a limited public provisions (essentially only for public comprehensive set of social security programs but little sector workers and a few formal private sector workers). risk coping (essentially for narrowly defined deserving This suggests that EAP countries should move within the groups). This attempted isolation from economic risk social risk management matrix toward more market-based had its price in terms of economic and social develop- and public provision (in other words, move away from ment. Moreover, the transition in the former Soviet relying largely on the left-hand column in Table 2.2). Union countries toward market-oriented economies has With aging populations and the gradually waning impor- revealed the social consequences of the absence of the tance of traditional family support in these countries, broader set of social risk management instruments. market-based and public provisions will assume While there has already becn a move away from cxcessive incrcasing importance. The lack of appropriate social risk prevention, there is still a need to adjust the now safety net-type provisions became particularly noticeable dysfunctional social security programs and enhance the during the recent financial crisis. Furthermore, EAP public risk-coping programs (such as social assistance) in countries should put more emphasis on risk prevention many countries. Equally important, governments should strategies, such as disaster prevention, elimination of develop market-oriented instruments, of which there is harmful child labor, and skill enhancement (in other a present deficiency, and strengthen informal mechanisms words, they should make an upward move in the social (a "leftward" move in Table 2.2). In the past, market- risk management matrix). based instruments have had very little importance in SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA AND SOUTH ASIA LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN The AFR and SAR regions are similar in income levels Countries in rhe LAC region are very heterogeneous with and social risk management situations in the matrix. They regard to both their income levels and the public provi- both rely on informal social risk management for large sion of social risk management mechanisms. Many parts of their populations, have few public programs (only countries implemented OECD-type public arrangements for the lucky few in the public sector, which is somewhat early in the development process, but the share of formal larger in the francophone countries than in other coun- employment in the labor force is still around 50 percent tries), and lack sufficient resources to provide large-scale on average, indicating the continued high importance of social assistance to alleviate the symptoms of poverty. The informal social risk management. This indicates the need two regions also share the feature of an oftendysfunctional for these countries to focus less on government-provided financial sector with heavy government involvement and a risk mitigation measures (and the implied contribution limited capacity to provide market-based instruments, rates to social security programs) and informal provisions, This would imply that they need to concentrate their while promoting more market-based risk mitigation and fiscal resources on alleviating deep poverty, reducing risk coping instruments (in other words, a move away from (for example, through measures to eliminate harmful the left and right sides of the social risk management child labor), and increasing market-based social risk matrix). It would also be advantageous to these countries management mechanisms such as safe financial assets and to strengthen social safety nets for potential crisis situa- microfinance. Gender-based violence and constraints on tions, on the one hand, and to give more attention to women's access to productive resources are major issues in reducing risks, on the other (in other words, make vertical both regions. moves in the matrix). THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA The MENA countries are characterized by relatively large welfare states and strong interfamily networks (focused in the left- and right-hand columns in Table 2.2 with rela- tively little in the middle, market-based column). The trend of public involvement began after the oil boom of the 1 970s, when governments used high oil revenues to expand social services and public sector employment. The subsequent decline in oil revenues forced most of the countries in the region to reverse this policy, but the private sector was unable to generate the new jobs required to absorb the rapidly growing labor forces. Informal sector employment and open unemployment have been on the rise since then. Today, social risk management consists mainly of informal, extended family arrangements and publicly provided schemes, although these are less prevalent than in the past. Market-based social risk management arrangements are still developing. Issues of particular importance include pensions and insurance (both of which have important implications for the labor market, old-age security, and the financial/ capital markets), labor policies, skills development, and the creation of targeted, effective, and cost-efficient social assistance programs. S( I .\l rRO I(( IOUN S i( IO R ShA IFi (AFY A u r ILr SUMMARY OF REGIONAL STRATEGIES Region Context and Diagnosis SRM and SP Bank Support with SP Implications/ Region (Emphasis on SP Issues) Arrangements Instruments Future Directions South The South Asia region shares Informal (family, community, The Bank's SP portfolio in Public works programs in Asia some characteristics with the and market-based) arrange- South Asia is the smallest of rural areas will likely remain Africa region in terms of level ments are common but in all regions, with around 25 an important mechanism of (SAR) of socioeconomic develop- some circumstances may be projects approved-either social risk management. It ment. Poverty is deep and prejudicial, for example, pure SP or with SP compo- would be sensible for other widespread in a large popula- exploitative power structures, nents-since 1991 (at least public efforts to focus on deep tion base, and vulnerability is unequal social rights. one in every country). Most of poverty and vulnerable a key concept, considering the these are projects in the agri- groups (for example, child large nunibers of people near Limited budgetary capacity culture sector (predominantly labor). the poverty line for whom has largely prohibited govern- in India) that involve public even marginal income fluctua- ment provision of significant works components, although Building on successful experi- tions can have serious social-assistance type there are also projects from ences with microcredit, consequences. This applies arrangements, and a dysfunc- the transportation, water financial intermediation will predominantly to the rural tional financial sector, supply, sanitation and envi- likely explore possibilities to sector- it holds 70-75% of the resulting in part from govern- ronment sectors. Sri Lanka introduce safe savings and total population, which is very ment overinvolvement, offers and India have both had pure insurance mechanisms to the susceptible to risks from limited formal market-based SP projects, in poverty allevia- poor. Group-based insurance, natural sources (for example, instruments of social risk tion and rural women's which induces peer moni- flooding, crop failure, etc.). management. development, respectively. toring and reduces moral There is also considerable hazard problems, has already poverty among the urban Public efforts in social risk begun to appear in the region. population, which faces a management have focused on different set of risks. Child the labor market (mainly Social investment funds may 71 labor is prevalent. through employment genera- provide a vehicle for tion in rural areas), subsidies, addressing poverty allevia- The role of the state in the and, to a limited extent, direct tion. To date, South Asian economy has generally been transfer programs. The most countries have not adopted heavy-handed, which has prominent type of interven- this instrument, which is created certain distortions. tion has been public works widely used in other regions. Financial markets have tradi- programs, which have met tionally been weak. Public with reasonable success in the Formal insurance and pension sector performance has been region. Credit subsidies and arrangements will not receive problematic. food transfer and price as much attention, at least in support programs have met the short term. Still, existing with relatively less success public systems suffer typical becaue of their sometimes problems and would benefit distortionary nature, difficul- from reform. ties in targeting, and possibilities for corruption. Financial intermediation has also been popular, and the region has pioneered positive experiences in the area of microcredit. Public pension schemes reach only a small portion of the population and represent a comparatively less pressing priority in the face of other social protection issues. I__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ L Region Context and Diagnosis SRM and SP Bank Support with SP Implications/ (Emphasis on SP Issues) Arrangements Instruments Future Directions East Rapid and sustained Labor market policies in the Before the crisis, the Bank's Labor market issues will Asia economic growth over the emerging market economies social protection portfolio in continue to be of special past several decades was the have achieved good relative the region emphasized labor interest to both the emerging and the primary means of socioeco- flexibility, and education and markets above other areas, market and transition P nomic improvement and training have largely met mainly as a function of economies, respectively, Pacific social protection. demand. Growth in labor country preferences, and because of the continuous (EAP) Governments had little incen- productivity has been shared many projects involved labor need to protect vulnerable tive to plan for downside risks with workers. The small market components. Crisis- people, which the crisis inten- and also relied on strong Pacific economies are related adjustment lending sified, and the problems informal, family-based comparatively very rigid, and has concentrated on SP, which posed by redundant labor in arrangements. Widespread regulations still impede represented over 80% of the the transition. Special topics public provision of education mobility and wage flexibility US$11 billion lent since 12/97. such as child labor, core labor and health services allowed in transition economies Loans to Korea took an inte- standards, and labor relations the remarkable rise in living despite reform. To varying grated approach with pension will continue to demand atten- standards. degrees, governments have reform, unemployment and tion. begun to take on the prob- health insurance, and safety The East Asia financia crisis lems of child labor, net components. Some of the emerging market revealed that reliance solely enforcement of core labor economies-Korea, the on growth was not enough to standards, and encourage- Support for pension reform Philippines, and Thailand-are ensure sustained poverty ment of a stronger labor has been limited (involving becoming more concerned reduction, existing formal relations framework. The only three operations), with the financial sustain- safety nets were dramatically emerging market economies although economic and sector ability of their PAYG social inadequate and lack of them have utilized job search assis- work has taken on the issue in security systems, and the in some countries made the tance, public works schemes, China, Mongolia, and the same holds true for China, effects worse, and informal and small enterprise develop- Philippines. Mongolia, and Vietnam, in coping mechanisms have ment programs. Some which state-owned enter- their limits. countries have recently exper- The adjustment loans have prises have encountered imented with unemployment addressed safety net difficulties meeting their Poverty still remains at high insurance. concerns, including a US$600 obligations during the transi- levels in several countries million loan to Indonesia tion. The reform agenda for including the Philippines, Public pension systems fall solely for safety net reform. pensions is large and includes Vietnam, Cambodia, Lao PDR, into the following categories: Several investment operations the strengthening of institu- and Mongolia. In high-growth National Provident Fund in other countries preceded tional capability and moves countries, vulnerability to systems (Indonesia, Malaysia, the crisis. toward more sustainable poverty remains high given Papua New Guinea); social multipillar options. the large numbers of house- security-type systems in Interest in social investment holds just above the poverty evolution (Korea, Philippines, funds is increasing, with Social safety nets have line and rising inequality. and Thailand); and social projects in Cambodia, assumed greater significance Vulnerable groups have security-type systems in tran- Indonesia, Lao PDR, the after the crisis in the emerging 72 emerged or increased in sition economies (China, Lao Philippines, and Thailand. market economies and will significance (e.g., youth, PDR, Cambodia, Mongolia, remain important in the tran- migrants, refugees, working and Vietnam). The provident Despite these trends, poverty sition economies in the and urban poor). Industrial funds provide very low levels assessments for the EAP context of increased disman- relations systems and core of benefits. Weak benefit- countries are generally tling of enterprise-based labor standard enforcement contribution links characterize outdated-an exception is social assistance, as in China are weak, contributing, for the SS Systems in Evolution, Thailand, where the 1996 and Vietnam. Social funds are example, to the continued leading to fiscal problems. In poverty assessment used catching on in both emerging existence of child labor and the transition economies, empirical data to evaluate market and transition coun- high worker injury rates. systems are largely unfunded anti-poverty programs and tries. Aging (the old-age depen- and have represented large suggested their reorientation dency ratio for EAP trails only burdens for the state-owned to achieve better results. So far the small market that of ECA), urbanization and enterprises. Other problems Currently, Bank staff are economies have done very formalization of labor may common to most systems preparing poverty updates for little in the way of developing weaken informal risk manage- include: poor design; separate Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao formal social protection inter- ment mechanisms. and generous civil service PDR, and Papua New Guinea. ventions, but they will face the pensions; lack of annuities; typical challenges in the Three groups of economies poor investment of reserves; future and must currently deal have somewhat different char- generally low coverage. with special problems such as acteristics, SP arrangements, youth unemployment. and corresponding needs: A variety of formal safety net emerging market economies programs (i.e., public works, (the East Asia Crisis 5- food security, cash transfers Indonesia, Republic of Korea, and social funds) exist in the Malaysia, the Philippines, and emerging market economies, Thailand); transition although they are limited in economies (Cambodia, China, scale and coverage. The tran- Lao POR, Mongolia, and sition economies have largely Vietnam); and small market relied on state-owned enter- economies (Papua New prises and collective Guinea and the Pacific agriculture to satisfy social Islands). welfare needs. Strong informal, community-based (The Bank does not work with support systems (e.g., wantok the high-income countries, or and matai) have been the the Democratic People's mainstay of the small market Republic of Korea or economies in terms of social Myanmar.) risk management. 1AL C - 1I C I 1 F1 ( '0 N vI ( I CT1C S I C, A I I Region Context and Diagnosis SRM and SP Bank Support with SP Implications/ (Emphasis on SP Issues) Arrangements Instruments Future Directions Africa Broad development chal- Informal arrangements * SIFs and Agence All of the following items (AFR) lenges: (diversified income strategies; d'Ex6cution de Travaux represent potential growth * Poverty savings in either highly liquid d'lnter&t Publique areas for SP: * Slow economic growth, on or nonliquid forms; coping (AGETIPS), operational in the periphery of global through draw-down of phys- about 15 countries, have a Systematic risk analysis at economy ical and human capital; created employment and the country level to better * Macroeconomic shocks risk-averse production choices; improved riskreduction take account of and under- * War and civil conflict mutual or co-insurance with through the efficient provi- stand household risk * Highest population growth friends or relatives; higher sion of small-scale social management behavior rate of regions fertility to provide labor and and economic infrastructure a Empirical analysis of the * Young population, small possibility of intergenerational but have not reached the scale of public resources portion of elderly, decline of transfer; borrowing and gift most vulnerable groups or spent on formal safety nets reproductive age population exchange) achieved much success in and the number and socioe- due to AIDS microcredit activities conomic profile of * Epidemic disease: AIDS For the poor these arrange- * Projects with labor market beneficiaries to allow reori- (esp. southern and eastern ments are often costly, components have generated entation of programs toward regions), resulting in loss of relatively ineffective, limited and mostly short- the poor incomeearners, production inequitable, self-limiting, and term employment * Planning of new operations of orphans and "skip-gener- may harm long-term human * Social insurance and in the area of AIDS preven- ation" households; malaria capital formation, bear nega- pension reform operations tion and mitigation, and (esp. in western region) tive externalities (i.e., problem have been extremely limited adjusting existing projects, * Drought, famine, and of abuse of the commons), and * Operations in other sectors such as social funds to seasonal shortages fail when most needed. have contributed to risk incorporate actions in this * Idiosyncratic risk in context reduction (for example, field (e.g., prime-age death of inequitable informal risk Formal arrangements: roads to markets) as a targeting criterion) management arrangements a Limited scope for transfer- * There have been a few inno- a Conflict prevention and (for example, death of based safety nets nationally vative operations in the area post-conflict intervention, husband when inheritance given low average incomes, of post-conflict intervention especially with children laws are unfair to women) large proportions of popula- a The World Bank has * Experimentation with new * Child labor tion in poverty and small size conducted poverty assess- tools such as earmarked, of wealthy class (except to ments in most countries, prepaid, multirisk social some degree in middle- providing a basis on which protection funds income countries, e.g., South to plan social policy * Testing of new forms of Africa, Namibia, Botswana, insurance, for example, Swaziland) savings accounts with with- * Price controls and subsidies drawal regulations on consumer goods and agri- associated with catastrophic cultural production have not or major expenditure needs been well targeted, and free * Structuring supply-side food programs have devel- measures to protect basic 73 oped dependency and social spending and modified production demand-side measures to behavior maintain consumption of * Minimum wage and job services (e.g., fee waivers) security regulations have after a shock benefited a small group of m Assisting in the reform of privileged formal sector civil codes and their enforce- workers while reducing ment in order to improve employment growth protection for women and * Public works programs have children not been widely used and, * Exploration of methods to when used, design flaws prevent harmful child labor, have limited effectiveness such as the combat of child * Subsidized microcredit trafficking, establishment of programs have been empha- a child labor fund, and sized at the expense of adjustment of school microsavings; meanwhile, calendar with agricultural they have encountered high cycle transaction costs due to low * Establishment of microsav- density and poor infrastruc- ings mechanisms ture, thereby not effectively * Enhancing drought reaching the poor preparedness through rural * Small-scale insurance infrastructure development schemes cover only low-cost, * Expanding social funds to high-frequency events due to promote positive informal the inability to form a large insurance methods risk pool, and they charge a Reforming existing pension regressive flat premiums systems to establish finan- * Public and private sector cial sustainability pension schemes operate in most countries but reach only extremely small portions of the population and are largely fiscally unsustainable A N N F F L R S U Nl M A R OF R E C. I O N A Z R A T F 5 G I r s Region Context and Diagnosis [ SRM and SP Bank Support with SP Implications/ (Emphasis on SP Issues) Arrangements Instruments Future Directions Europe The dissolution of the socialist European transition Prior to the 1 990s most ECA In European transition d SP system and transition from economies have undertaken countries were not Bank economies, labor market poli- and planned to market economy more aggressive restructuring clients. Bank SP work was cies should focus on Central have led to lower living stan- and layoffs coupled with sporadic and related mainly to improving flexibility, in part Asia dards, greater vulnerability, higher levels of SP spending labor markets and social through decentralization of poverty, and unemployment. in response to output expenditures. This changed collective bargaining and (ECA) declines. Strong labor market dramatically with the dissolu- legislative reforms to reduce The central SP policy goal institutions, i.e., unions, tion of the Soviet Union and termination/hiring constraints. under socialism was full labor collective bargaining institu- the economic transition, Minimum wages should be market employment. tions, and minimum wages, which resulted in the restruc- kept low. In countries that Subsidies to state enterprises stemmed real wage declines. turing of SP systems and have realized growth, active helped achieve this objective. The creation of unemploy- institutions. labor market programs, with Since the state implicitly ment insurance without built-in evaluation mecha- insured against unemploy- coordination with social assis- The Bank has funded labor nisms, should be maintained ment, it did not encourage tance measures has generated market programs involving to reduce the long duration of development of explicit provi- incentive problems. pre-and post layoff assistance unemployment. Pension and sions, i.e., unemployment Governments are reforming to workers through job coun- unemployment insurance insurance. The state deter- pension systems both through seling and referral, public systems should be reformed mined the price of labor and parametric changes and the works, wage subsidies, small to improve their affordability job placement, which caused introduction and preparation business creation, and and consumption- smoothing distortions in the labor market of multipillar systems. Means- retraining. It has helped function, with benefits linked and skills mix. tested social assistance has develop systems to register to contributions. The introduc- become the main poverty alle- unemployment, financed civil tion of multipillar pension Pension and social insurance viation mechanism. works and equipment for schemes will improve savings schemes had wide coverage employment bureau, trained for old age and deepen capital but have become fiscally Eurasian transition economies personnel in labor market markets. Minimum pensions unsustainable in the face of have done relatively less programs, supported capacity and means-tested social assis- loose eligibility criteria, low restructuring. Although open to contract out active labor tance systems can be used to retirement ages, generous unemployment is lower, many market programs, developed address poverty. However, benefits, evasion, a weak workers remain with unpaid business incubators, and programs should incorporate benefit-contribution link, leaves and large wage arrears. supported public works work incentives and should be continued population aging, Labor market institutions are programs. Policy- based fiscally affordable. De-institu- and a devastated tax base (in weak and have been unable to adjustment lending has tionalization and the the case of Eurasian coun- stem the decline in wages. focused on improving the development of community tries). The informal economy is fiscal solvency of unemploy- based services should also be larger (as a share of GDP). ment and social insurance a focus of social policy. In the context of guaranteed Lack of evaluation of new systems through the reduc- employment, countries did widespread active labor tion of payroll taxes or In Eurasian transition not develop market-style market programs means that improvement in contributions. economies, macrostability and 74 safety net structures. Rather, their effectiveness remains The Bank has helped in the restructuring must precede they used extensive subsidies unknown. Pension spending creation and restructuring of fundamental labor market meet basic needs, provided still remains high relative to severance payments, respec- reforms. In the meantime, cash andin-kind benefits for e output, but effective protec- tively, in countries where severance pay to spur restruc- certain vulnerable groups and tion is insignificant in real enterprise was limited and turing and reforms of the emphasized residential care terms, with benefit payments where these were labor legislation to lay the for groups outside the rubric in arrears. An exception is constraining the termination ground work for competitive of normal life. Dismantling the Kazakhstan, which switched to of workers. Another area of market structure can be initi- subsidy system, especially in a privately managed, fully emphasis has been reform of ated. Limited tax collection the Eastern European coun- funded system. The safety net labor relations legislation. and large informal economies tries, combined with provides uncoordinated and mean that risk mitigation or increased unemployment and overlapping benefits and In the area of pension reform, consumption-smoothing poverty, neglect of residential services and still focuses the Bank has provided tech- programs, e.g., unemploy- institutions, or the significant more heavily on subsidies for nical assistance and financed ment insurance and arrears and decline in value of housing and utilities (rather reform efforts in 18 countries multipillar pensions that link cash and in-kind benefits in than means-tested transfers). through stand-alone projects contribution to benefits, are the Eurasian countries, mean These are not funded but are or adjustment loans with difficult to implement and that social safety nets deserve poorly administered and pension components. sustain. Instead, social protec- increasing attention. ta rgeted. tion programs should focus The Bank has been relatively on poverty relief. Flat benefits State policies resulted, often less involved in work on for pensions and unemploy- purposefully, in attrition of safety nets, but it has ment should be considered, informal arrangements. provided comprehensive with unemployment benefits sector work and investment coordinated with severance European transition and adjustment lending in the pay. The safety net should economies (vs. Eurasian) have Balkans, Romania, Russia, focus on simple indicator realized lower GDP declines Kyrgyz Republic, and targeting, such as child and higher levels of income. Kazakhstan. It has investment allowances. A better under- Institutional and administra- projects in Latvia, Lithuania, standing of prevailing tive capacity is stronger. In Armenia, and Georgia. There informal safety nets should be leading reformers, growth has are social investment funds in achieved before the introduc- resumed, and unemployment Armenia, Georgia, Romania, tion of new systems. Active is declining. Eurasian transi- Bulgaria, Moldova, Albania, labor market programs, given tion economies have and Tajikistan. large informal economies and experienced falling real wages low labor demand, are not and labor productivity; growth likely to be appropriate. Social has generally not resumed. investment funds or commu- Average income per capita is nity works programs can help lower, and open unemploy- in providing temporary ment and the informal sector employment. are growing. () 1:0 1 A 4) 1:( 1R I 1(),\0 FC~ Z 81('1(1 .lA I 10( G Context and Diagnosis j SRM and SP Bank Support with SP Implications/ Region |{(Emphasis on SP Issues) Arrangements Instruments j Future Directions Latin Countries of the region have Countries of the LAC region The social protection portfolio LAC countries, with a few America wide differences in terms of face a number of common in the LAC region is the Bank's exceptions, will need to socioeconomic development, challenges in social protection largest, and it has projects in continue their efforts to liber- and the but they generally share and have normally established all the traditional areas of SRP alize labor markets. The .a I several characteristics that a full range of programs to creation of insurance mecha- Carib- have resulted fundamentally handle them. These have The Bank financed technical nisms for informal sector bean from a narrow and exclusive experienced largely the same and vocational training workers and severance pay ly difficulties, leading to similar (LAC) economic growth pattern, The r mfforts. programs for years in the arrangements for formal countries have sizeable (and * Many countries have been past. Many projects have sector workers will remain the growing) informal labor attempting to ease regula- included components main priorities in terms of markets (57% of workers in tion in the formal sector involving the labor markets, social risk management both 1995 on average, up from 52% labor market, which has for example, through employ- in the short and medium term. in 1990), persistent poverty historically driven growth in ment creation. More recently, (37% of the population of the the informal sector, but in and as part of structural Countries will progress in the region), where most of the general progress has been reform programs, the Bank first generation of pension poor are in urban areas (58%) modest. Reforms involve has supported some govern- reform, and some will begin but the worst poverty is rural reducing taxation on labor ments' efforts to ease the to act on second generation (59% of extreme poor), very use; enhancing flexibility in labor markets reform process. issues, such as high adminis- unequal income distribution contracting, deploying and trative costs, continued low (Gini in the range of 0.4 to 0.6, terminating workers; With regard to the region's coverage due to a large and on average the highest producing means for the extensive efforts in pension informal sector labor market for any region in the world), peaceful resolution of labor reform, the Bank has made 27 and unwillingness of certain and very unequal access to disputes, including collective loans to various countries groups to adhere, better physical, human, and financial bargaining; improving sever- (Argentina Bolivia Brazil annuity provision, and inte- wih ance pay systems; and (AgniaBoii,Bai, antypvso,adite capital (the 7 countries with addressing redundancies Colombia, Costa Rica, El gration of separate public the highest concentration of and quality and efficiency Salvador, Honduras, Mexico, sector and civil servant land in the world are in LAC). issues in public sector Panama, Peru, and Uruguay), schemes into the main public Unemployment and underem- employment (partly through it has produced at least 16 system. Strengthening of the ployment have been downsizing and training). economic and sector work financial sector will play a significant in many countries, Active labor market reports, and some 23 regional major role for progress in the and governments have often programs, mainly in the or country-specific papers pensions area. used public employment as a form of technical and voca- covering diverse aspects of J relief mechanism (and as a tional education and the subject. Governments are increasingly reward for political loyalty). training, have been promi- realizing that social safety nets nent in some countries but Safety net programs must be in place to help them In addition to natural disas- not others. The Bank has encouraged and deal with the impact of crises ters, several countries have * Fiscal unsustainability and backed the implementation of on the poor/vulnerable, and felt the shocks of recent finan- Iweak benefit-contribution the social investment fund assist those unable to help cial and monetary crises, for schemes have contributend to approach in the region, and themselves. To this end, they example, balance of payments widespread experimentation has funded SIFs in over 1 2 will need to rationalize and 75 and exchange rate and with reform, of which much countries. In some countries it streamline existing programs volatility in foreign investment has been under the multip- is already financing the third and improve budgetary allo- and private capital flows. As a illar model. Prominent or fourth generation of SIF cation practices and result of economic crises, new "second-generation" reform projects. In addition, protec- processes, so that their groups of poor and vulnerable issues include persistent low tion of core social assistance funding becomes "counter- people are emerging. coverage despite shifts to expenditures, public cyclical." Determining the full funding, high administra- works/employment genera- future directions and role of tive costs (often associated tion, and transfer schemes are Social Investment Funds will with marketing) of pension receiving increasing Bank be a key issue. Applying fund management bodies, support, largely as part of its adequate and transparent and inequity from the crises response packages. targeting mechanisms and continued existence of c reaching vulnerable groups special arrangements for (for example indigenous public sector workers in populations intinue many countries. populations) will continue to * Governments in the region challenge safety net programs have employed all forms of and SlFs. safety nets, especially social assistance (mainly in-kind Other social protection issues transfers) and public works, that will require attention with different degrees of include child labor, increased success regarding both crime and violence, and coverage and targeting of disaster prevention. the poor. Many have removed some badly targeted subsidies (e.g., food, energy) but not others (housing). The region was the first to implement the social investment fund (SIF) model both as a response to the period of structural adjustment and then as an efficient means to finance social and economic infra- structure. The SIFs built upon or complemented previously existing safety net programs. They now exist in many countries of the region. A N N EX F O U R * U \tMXiARY O F R E G I O NA L S T RAT E I ES Region Context and Diagnosis SRM and SP J Bank Support with SP Implications/ 9Reo |(Emphasis on SP Issues) Arrangements Instruments Future Directions Middle Oil markets have exercised a Macroeconomic and trade * Many Bank projects in the A key issue involves East large effect on the level and policies implemented during region relate directly to improving effectiveness of variability of country incomes, the oil boom (i.e., expansion employment (for example, relatively large public social and and determined socioeco- of public sector as a substitute Algeria - Rural Employment spending through better nomic trends as well as for "social protection" and Project) or have labor management of service provi- North movements in labor markets. small private sector) have market components. sion and increased synergy Africa shaped labor market structure * Vocational training has been among governments, private Until the mid-1980s, the and dynamics. The rigid insti- an area of emphasis for mechanisms, and civil society. (MENA) MENA region benefited from tutional structures have led to Bank operations (Algeria, high growth rates largely a rather inflexible response to Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Labor market policies need to based on oil price increases. labor market pressures: in the Morocco, Tunisia, and facilitate efficient employment As a result of the oil revenues formal sector, employment Yemen). creation. To achieve this goal, governments increased growth did not match labor * Pension reforms have been employment in public enter- investment in the social supply growth, while the limited in the region, though prises needs to be rationalized sectors and established a response of real wages was there is increasing aware- and firms' adjustment costs whole range of formal social slow as the labor market ness of the need for reform must be reduced; nonwage protection mechanisms; imbalances grew. Informal (Egypt, Morocco and labor costs need to be better poverty remained lower than employment expanded, and Tunisia). aligned with desirable objec- in other regions; the state poverty incidence in most * Social Investment Funds tives (for example, labor increased its role in wage countries rose. Almost univer- (Algeria, Egypt, West Bank market insurance) to achieve setting and created most of sally, countries are employing and Gaza, Yemen) have better outcomes at reduced the employment; and popula- large vocational education been used to mitigate labor costs; effective labor tion growth and high costs of and training programs, which shocks and their effects on market programs should be providing scarce water are expensive and out of tune the most vulnerable groups used to cushion the costs of resources was not a concern. with labor conditions. and also as compensatory adjustment to workers (such mechanisms to increase as public works, retraining, The collapse of oil prices in Public pension systems are access to, and the quality of, employment services, job the mid-1980s depressed based on partial funding and basic social and infrastruc- search assistance, self- incomes and led to low invest- operate on a defined benefit, ture services used by the employment support, etc). ment rates, slow-even PAYG basis. They have weak poor. However, their opera- Vocational training reform is a negative-GDP growth, and links to contributions, and tions remain small priority, considering the asso- increased vulnerability, fund reserves are often ineffi- compared to the magnitude ciated fiscal burden and the poverty, and unemployment. ciently managed. Other of poverty in MENA. limited links to labor demand. problems include: poor * A few adjustment loans Catastrophic shocks have also design, generous civil servant have addressed safety net Improving the financial war in Iran and Iraq and pensions, poor investment of concerns, but the efficiency sustainability and increasing confliGts In Yemen, Iraanond reserves, and low coverage, of the systems still needs to the low coverage of the PAYG conflicts in Yemen, Lebanon, The system also creates labor be improved. pension systems would and Algeria). In addition to its market distortions due to * The Bank has conducted require the rationalization and 76 direct costs, conflct has also large implicit taxation on poverty assessments in revamping of the benefit led to a reduction In out - labor, and provides incentives most countries. However, formula, the integration of and Jordan) and substantial to move to the informal they are generally outdated schemes or the harmonization repatriations. sector. and data reliability limits of benefits across schemes, their usefulness. and a move toward multipillar The economic decline Formal safety net programs systems. Thes ceonomi dhecflloine (i.e., public works, microfi- has created the following nance, food subsidies, cash Social safety nets need to be (a) How can productivity transfers, and social funds) better monitored and evalu- increase, unemployment have been used to provide ated. Microfinance should be decline, and labor incomes income-earning opportunities part of a country's financial increasen for the unemployed, to reduce sector development strategy; (b) What mix of formal and poverty, and to mitigate public works need to use self- informal social protection shocks and their effects on the targeting mechanisms more mechanisms can protect the most vulnerable groups. But efficiently to attract the poor; welfare of the poor and efficiency of these programs- sustainability of social funds decrease the vulnerability of especially those involving needs to be improved; food both the poor and the fragile subsidies-can be improved. subsidies need to be linked to middle class? a broad poverty alleviation (c) What policies can restore Kinship-based networks char- strategy; and the coverage of a sustainable growth path acterize social organization in social assistance needs to be in the region, and how can the MENA region. Households increased. the results of growth be equi- activate these networks to tably distributed among the offset the effects of crises. population? These networks are of vital importance in terms of spreading and diversifying the risks, insuring against them (i.e., localized catastrophes), and strengthening, over the long term, the economic and social capital within a group that can be accessed in times of shock or stress. >0 C I RA ) IP L(: 1 1'IIN SL ( OI 0R >1RA I E(GY World Bank Regions I M Latin America and the Caribbean Region 11 B--Europe and Central Asia Region Middle East and North Africa Region M Africa Region South Asia Region East Asia and Pacific Region z !~M OECD High-income economies Other LU ,~~~~,S'C,~. ,,,. . 0 LU __N)~=.., :.c T HE WO R LD BANK 1818 ti St NW Washligtoii DC( 204,i,i Iclephorie: 202-477-12.34 Facsimilic: 202-27'-6391 Iilterniet: www.worldban k.org E-niitil: fcedback(& worldbank.org For more information: Social Protection Advisory ServiceIIIE 181S H St NW Washington, DC 20433 socialprotection(6worldbank.org http://www.worldbank.org/sp ISBN 0-8213-4903-1