Title: Including Children in Policy Responses to Economic Crisis :
1Including Children in Policy Responses to
Economic Crisis Lessons from Past Policies for
a Sustainable Future
2Intent of paper
- Unpacking some of the factors that make a
difference in whether and how resumption of
social progress is achievable - Identifying whether children can meanwhile be
protected. - Proposing that we can do more about it than is
currently being done through conventional child
oriented policy - Suggesting that we are obliged to tackle this
problem by engaging with the debates on economic
crisis and recommending how.
3- in the majority of policy contexts child
wellbeing is for the most part treated as a
benign issue, with children remaining largely
politically invisible and discussion of their
interests on the whole confined to
sector-specific and welfare-oriented debates.
4Progress on child wellbeing, is not inevitable,
even with economic growth
- In many developed countries, child poverty rates
remain worryingly high, especially considering
their levels of economic prosperity. - Take the USA.
- In 1979 child poverty stood at 16.2,
- reached a peak of 22 in 1993
- and was still 18 in 2007 (NCCP)
- Child poverty is
- multi-dimensional, dynamic over the life-course,
dependent on relationships and subject to a
particular depth of voicelessness
5Retrospective Studies
- Asian Financial Crisis of 19971998 (the impacts
of which on household poverty have been
extensively studied) - The experience of transition in former Soviet
Republics in the early 1990s - Currency crises in Mexico (1995) and Argentina
(2002) - African experiences with agricultural and oil
price fluctuations.
6Predictions for current crisisapproximately
30,00050,000 excess infant deaths in Africa in
2009 and especially girls.FAO (2009) projects
that undernourishment will grow by 8 in LACIn
Asia if unaddressed (UNICEF) increases in rates
of maternal anaemia by 1020 and prevalence of
low birth weight by 510, while rates of
childhood stunting could increase by 37 and
wasting by 816.
7Trends in undernourishment and projections for
2009
8Effect on undernourishment
9Primary school completion and child mortality
10Mexico infant mortality increased from 5-7
1995-6 (fell again after 1997) Ethiopia
increase in cereal prices of 25 - increases
child malnutrition by 3-4 Demographic health
surveys in 59 countries highlight negative
association between changes in GDP and infant
mortality Poorer CIS countries - basic school
enrolment rates declined 10 to 15 in early
1990s - Seven countries still at risk of not
meeting MDG 1 in Kazakhstan, pre-school
enrollment fell from over 50 to 12, from best
in central Asia or the Caucasus to among the
worst Increases in proportion of young children
left home alone across regions Increased
participation in work force in Mexico In East
Asia numbers of children living on the streets
increased in Indonesia and Thailand at risk re
sex work, drug use and crime (ADB, 2006 Knowles
et al., 1999 Suharto, 2007). Increase in child
abandonment and numbers of children taken into
care in all four countries (ADB, 2000 Kim, 2004).
11But Some Children Protected In East Asia child
mortality rates protected and downward trends in
child malnutrition continued Impacts on education
in Latin America - minimal. Mexico - school
attendance rates for children of both sexes were
unchanged and increased for some age groups.
Both male and female children aged 1518 had
higher school attendance rates in 1996 than in
1994. People protected education consumption and
State did to an extent.
12Financial Crisis - General
General regional and international macro-economic
health
General regional and international macro-economic
health
Dimensions of the macro-economic environment
Remittances
Financial flows
Trade and prices (commodities and services)
Aid
Exchange Rates
Fiscal space
Rising unemployment, under-employment,
declining working conditions
Declining investment in public services
(education, health, nutrition, water and
sanitation, housing, protection, care)
Meso-level effects of the financial crisis
Reduced access to credit
Declining social capital rising social violence
Civil society policy advocacy service provision
- Policy responses
- (Fiscal stimulus, trade policy, monetary policy,
aid policy - pre-existing and crisis-response investment in
basic services, - pre-existing social protection infrastructure
and crisis-specific measures, - labour policy)
Political economy dynamics
Policy responses
Household consumption (food and services, both
quantity and quality)
Protection (physical and emotional) promotion
of well-being
Household management of assets and investments
Household labour allocation
Reproduction, nurture, and care
Contribution to community life
Functions of the household
Intra-household dynamics household composition
Child-specific vulnerabilities Deprivations of
rights to survival, development, protection,
participation
13Trade level by sector
Source World Bank (2009)
14Remittance flows - LA
15Financial Crisis - General
General regional and international macro-economic
health
General regional and international macro-economic
health
Dimensions of the macro-economic environment
Remittances
Financial flows
Trade and prices (commodities and services)
Aid
Exchange Rates
Fiscal space
Rising unemployment, under-employment,
declining working conditions
Declining investment in public services
(education, health, nutrition, water and
sanitation, housing, protection, care)
Meso-level effects of the financial crisis
Reduced access to credit
Declining social capital rising social violence
Civil society policy advocacy service provision
- Policy responses
- (Fiscal stimulus, trade policy, monetary policy,
aid policy - pre-existing and crisis-response investment in
basic services, - pre-existing social protection infrastructure
and crisis-specific measures, - labour policy)
Political economy dynamics
Policy responses
Household consumption (food and services, both
quantity and quality)
Protection (physical and emotional) promotion
of well-being
Household management of assets and investments
Household labour allocation
Reproduction, nurture, and care
Contribution to community life
Functions of the household
Intra-household dynamics household composition
Child-specific vulnerabilities Deprivations of
rights to survival, development, protection,
participation
16- Unemployment Current Crisis
- ILO predicts unemployment could rise to 8.5 in
2009 with an additional 28 million more
vulnerable jobs in Africa alone. - Effects on export industries in the first
instance Bangladesh, China, Vietnam to name a
few.
17Characteristics of unemployment
- In all regions, unemployment rose, often
significantly and patterned by age, gender,
ethnicity and location - Indonesia from 1.5 in 1996 5.6 in 1998
- Argentina 12.5 rise in unemployment in 2000
- womens greater employment in flexible and casual
labour, specific affected sectors and their
reproductive work made them more vulnerable - in Korea there were particularly high levels of
job losses in clerical work (-18.4) - In Kyrgyzstan, the unemployment rate among women
in the mid 2000s was one and a half times that of
men
18Unemployment Characteristics
- Young people very much affected In Thailand -
persons aged below 30 (one-third of the labour
force) accounted for 60 of the increase in
unemployment, whereas those over 50 experienced
little increase in unemployment - In 2003, urban young people aged under 30 made up
13 of Kyrgyzstans total labor force, but
one-quarter of all unemployed people - Youth unemployment rates in CIS region are (2006)
31, and a relaxed definition, including
discouraged youth, 41 - Mean age of first birth is 2223 years in Russia
implications for childrens early years in
poverty - Other specific characteristics rise in informal
sector employment spatial effects, labour
migration - Much of this in a context where there was a drop
in value of real wages, inflation and steep food
or other commodity price hikes
19Unemployment forecasts for select MENA countries
20Financial Crisis - General
General regional and international macro-economic
health
General regional and international macro-economic
health
Dimensions of the macro-economic environment
Remittances
Financial flows
Trade and prices (commodities and services)
Aid
Exchange Rates
Fiscal space
Rising unemployment, under-employment,
declining working conditions
Declining investment in public services
(education, health, nutrition, water and
sanitation, housing, protection, care)
Meso-level effects of the financial crisis
Reduced access to credit
Declining social capital rising social violence
Civil society policy advocacy service provision
- Policy responses
- (Fiscal stimulus, trade policy, monetary policy,
aid policy - pre-existing and crisis-response investment in
basic services, - pre-existing social protection infrastructure
and crisis-specific measures, - labour policy)
Political economy dynamics
Policy responses
Household consumption (food and services, both
quantity and quality)
Protection (physical and emotional) promotion
of well-being
Household management of assets and investments
Household labour allocation
Reproduction, nurture, and care
Contribution to community life
Functions of the household
Intra-household dynamics household composition
Child-specific vulnerabilities Deprivations of
rights to survival, development, protection,
participation
21Political Economy Dynamics
- These shaped the reform process both how deep
the crisis was felt and how quickly and
effectively governments were able to respond. - Malaysia rejected austerity programme and
continued to invest in social services with
positive effects. - Mexico creative leadership made links between
equity and growth and garnered support to
introduce new strategies with crisis as
motivation - Progresa/Oportunidades - Argentina - progressive social forces included a
range of society-based actors. New measures
significantly influenced by participatory
government-sponsored consultations Mesa de
Diálogo - Civil society activity in Korea, Indonesia,
Thailand and Argentina helped shape policy
responses
22Turning crisis to opportunity
- Civil society and social movements clearly had an
important role - Even in less conducive environments
- In transition countries near universal child
benefits decimated but pension benefits rose in
many countries during the same period - Attributed to the relative political weakness of
child rights advocates as compared with pensioner
groups
23Social Protection and Aid
- International bailout loan packages important
to immediate crisis response - Aid policies played a key role in facilitating
targeted social protection programmes - Development programme for the poorest - Malaysia
World Bank - Social impact mitigation programme in Thailand
World Bank, ADB, Miyazawa plan - Indonesia social protection development
programme -ADB - Mexico Aid grew from 96.55 million in 1989
424 million in 1994 including support to social
safety nets - Kyrgyzstan a model for comprehensive dev
framework, PRSPs and rewarded with significant
aid flows - Less attention paid to child specific social
protection measures
24Basic services and/or social protection
- A clear cleavage in crisis response debates is
investment in basic services pro or counter
cyclical? - Also significant tensions in between cutting
social expenditure on basic services and
increasing that on targeted social protection - In Thailand there were significant cutbacks
reproductive and preventative healthcare
(including HIV prevention and education) - Indonesia health sector spending declined by 9
and 13 (97/8 and 98/9) - At the same time social protection measures
introduced also with help of donors - Mexico and Argentina focused on targeted social
protection and attempted to maintain basic
services with help from World Bank - Where both can be maintained there are
significantly fewer social impacts
25Current crisis protecting services
- The extent to which investments in basic services
are being protected varies considerably across
regions - SSA AfDB warns spending on basic needs
threatened - Nigeria 16 cut in education and 20 in health
- MENA and Kazakhstan no indication of increasing
spend in response to crisis induced
vulnerabilities (in both despite previous strong
economic growth basic needs spend low) - By Contrast
- Thailand - Health budget protected through a
special act - China 123 billion package introduced
- Chile counter-cyclical fiscal policy 7.8
increase in social spending - Costa Rica spend on housing and education
increased - Social protection - although improved since last
crisis - responses so far limited - Some exceptions Kazakhstan, Mexico, Bolivia
among others - Â
26- Attention to social protection remains one of
the key features of successful policy responses
but we can and should do much more with our
social protection packages
27Financial Crisis - General
General regional and international macro-economic
health
General regional and international macro-economic
health
Dimensions of the macro-economic environment
Remittances
Financial flows
Trade and prices (commodities and services)
Aid
Exchange Rates
Fiscal space
Rising unemployment, under-employment,
declining working conditions
Declining investment in public services
(education, health, nutrition, water and
sanitation, housing, protection, care)
Meso-level effects of the financial crisis
Reduced access to credit
Declining social capital rising social violence
Civil society policy advocacy service provision
- Policy responses
- (Fiscal stimulus, trade policy, monetary policy,
aid policy - pre-existing and crisis-response investment in
basic services, - pre-existing social protection infrastructure
and crisis-specific measures, - labour policy)
Political economy dynamics
Policy responses
Household consumption (food and services, both
quantity and quality)
Protection (physical and emotional) promotion
of well-being
Household management of assets and investments
Household labour allocation
Reproduction, nurture, and care
Contribution to community life
Functions of the household
Intra-household dynamics household composition
Child-specific vulnerabilities Deprivations of
rights to survival, development, protection,
participation
28Micro impacts
Gender relations change a shift in the locus of
power Migrants are returning home some
unemployed Increased unemployment in general Men
and women are taking on two or more jobs Some
women are taking on paid work for the first
time Children are left home alone or are
neglected In some cases children are working and
some are withdrawn from school Mental ill health
is on the increase Domestic tension and violence
increases Community capacity to nurture and
protect is compromised
29Social Protection education, health and
nutrition
- Pre-existing social protection systems and
tailored crisis-specific responses - decisive in
mitigating impacts on childrens educational,
health and nutritional outcomes. - Scholarship programmes and social health
insurance initiatives in East Asia, - Cash transfers in Latin America and
- Public works in Latin America and Africa
- BUT limited attention to child protection and
care - Despite rises in intra-household tensions and
violence no increased investment in related
social services - Shockingly limited response to rising rates of
mental ill-health and drug and substance abuse in
East Asia and transition country contexts - Despite starkly gendered effects of unemployment,
under-employment and household poverty no
measures to - address womens time poverty
- support womens greater responsibility for care
and domestic work, for instance through
subsidised childcare services
30Social Protection decisive in mitigating impacts
but neglects child protection, nurture and care
31- Political economy dimensions
- Aid linked to social protection
- Counter-cyclical investment in social services
- Social protection linked to child protection,
nurture and care - Data timely, systematic, age and gender
disaggregated
32Safeguarding and progressing childrens rights
Mainstreaming children into economic crisis
responses