Social Protection Sector Strategy: From Safety Net to SpringboardWorld Bank Publications, 2001 M01 1 - 76 pages At the beginning of the new century, it is clear that while individual social programs can improve people's welfare and reduce poverty, a more holistic approach is needed in order to lift more people in the developing world out of poverty. This Social Protection Strategy paper reflects this understanding and uses 'social risk management' as an important conceptual framework for the World Bank's work in this sector. 'Social Protection Sector Strategy' is the first World Bank Strategy Paper for the social protection sector, at the time, one of the World Bank's youngest sectors. 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 provide support to the critically poor. It recommends that social protection programs be embedded in an integrated approach to poverty reduction based on a new framework for social risk management. |
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Page 1936
... lending work toward a more holistic , client - driven agenda . Specifically , the strategic directions would expand the World Bank's support for informal and market - based social protection arrangements , resulting in , for example ...
... lending work toward a more holistic , client - driven agenda . Specifically , the strategic directions would expand the World Bank's support for informal and market - based social protection arrangements , resulting in , for example ...
Page 1940
... 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 ...
... 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 ...
Page 1943
... 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 ...
... 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 ...
Page 1945
... 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 ...
... 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 ...
Page 1948
... lending and analytical work stimulated by the increased emphasis that countries have given to social issues and by recent financial crises . This chapter covers the World Bank's involvement in social protection , which began long before ...
... lending and analytical work stimulated by the increased emphasis that countries have given to social issues and by recent financial crises . This chapter covers the World Bank's involvement in social protection , which began long before ...
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Common terms and phrases
activities adjustment loans Africa approach areas assets Bank's social protection benefits Chapter child labor client countries community-driven development coping crisis East Asia employment evaluation example fiscal formal gender global groups growth households human development impact implementation important income redistribution income support increase informal institutions involve issues labor market Latin America lending manage risk market-based mechanisms ment microcredit microfinance microsavings multipillar old-age operations Operations Evaluation Department pension reform pension systems percent pilot poor population poverty assessments priority public sector public works programs region risk management framework risk management instruments risk reduction sector strategy shocks social assistance social funds social investment funds social policy social protection instruments social protection programs social protection sector social risk management social safety nets South Asia Strategy Paper subsidies sustainable targeting tion transition economies vulnerability women World Bank World Bank Group World Bank Institute
Popular passages
Page 1950 - We commit ourselves to promoting social integration by fostering societies that are stable, safe and just and that are based on the promotion .and protection of all human rights, as well as on non-discrimination, tolerance, respect for diversity, equality of opportunity, solidarity, security, and participation of all people, including disadvantaged and vulnerable groups and persons...
Page 1956 - What is it that distinguishes the thousands of years of history from what we think of as modern times? . . . 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 the gods and that men and women are not passive before nature.
Page 1967 - Dynamic Risk Management and the Poor: Developing a Social Protection Strategy for Africa (April 2001).
Page 1999 - WORLD BANK (2000) Dynamic risk management and the poor: Developing a social protection strategy for Africa (draft), Human Development Group, Africa Region, Washington, BC: The World Bank.
Page 1954 - Bank's client countties and have, hy and large, heen effective. However, as the world has evolved, so has the need for the World Bank ro modify its approach ro social prorection.
Page 1997 - Gerting an Earful: A Review of Beneficiary Assessments of Social Funds.
Page 1958 - The sources of tisk may he natural (tor example, floods) or the result of human activity (for example, inflation resulting from economic polio-); tisks can he uncotrelared (idiosynctaric) or cotrelared among individuals (covatiant), over time (repeared), or with orher tisks (hunched).
Page 1959 - Since many of the tisks faced hy poor people are covatiant in nature, informal management mechanisms at the family or community level are typically nor very effective.
Page 1942 - Removing children from school is a common coping mechanism for poor households, hut it endangets the long-rerm porential of the children.
Page 1970 - If approptiare policies are in place in these areas, then households are much less vulnerahle.