Title: PARAMETER 1
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- Public works and employment programmes towards a
long term development approach for social
protection and the delivery of assets and
services - Long-Term Social Protection for Inclusive
Growth A Policy Dialogue and Learning Event, - Johannesburg, October 12, 2010
- Radhika Lal
- International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth
2Current Context
- Slowdown of the world economy
- Financial fragility
- Fluctuations in exports
- Volatility in commodity prices
- Difficulties in ensuring a recovery in jobs
- Some countries had a jobs crisis even before
the current economic crisis - Differential country experiences in weathering
the crisis - All other things being equal, some countries
appear to have been able to mitigate impacts
because of (long term) social assistance measures
which were already in place (e.g. Brazil, India) - Interest in results-based innovations in social
assistance programmes that can be easily expanded
and can address emerging public good deficits
3Conventional Short-Term Policy Options
Scaling up cash transfers Effective though it may be difficult to scale up quickly unless a single registry for social programmes has information on the entirety of the low-income population (i.e. both beneficiaries and non-beneficiaries), and the cut-off point can be increased to allow more "vulnerable" people to enter
Subsidies to the private sector to hire workers May result in a substitution so its not clear how many new jobs will be created and how many retained
ALMP Training schemes Important to upgrade skills on-job training is best but the private sector unlikely to have an incentive to skill people when demand is stagnant.
Promoting labor market flexibility What is efficient on the microeconomic scale (enterprise level) may be counter-productive on the macroeconomic scale (if it does not stimulate higher investment or increase export demand)
Microfinance Recent studies point to a limited impact on poverty - not all young people, and of the unemployed in general, have the potential to be entrepreneurs
Infrastructure programmes Impact on employment depends upon labor intensity
Public works The quality of assets and longer term impacts on poverty are likely to be an issue unless there is a focus on these issues.
4Medium term policies
- Need for a longer-term development perspective in
response to the crisis - Public policies to re-ignite investment for
transformational and inclusive growth - Priority assigned to livelihood diversification,
social upgrading and skill development for
selected sectors - Investment in social protection programmes that
go beyond safety nets - Address deficits in infrastructure, social
services, and demand which have detrimental
impacts on the conditions for re-igniting growth
and limiting adverse impacts on human capital - However, ensuring scalable and sustainable
investment in social protection has been
difficult for many countries in the region.. and
the crisis has cut into the fiscal space
available - Making the linkages between growth and social
protection and, more specifically, between the
productive dimensions of social protection and
the real economy productive policies could help
5Medium-long-term structural transformation
policies
- Development transformations are key for
sustainability of growth, - Without a forward looking focus on innovation,
countries can be locked into production and
exports of minerals, primary commodities and
simple processing activities which make them
vulnerable to competition and generate too few
resources for economic and social upgrading and
for the creation of good jobs. - Transformation is a continuous process which
requires a focus on learning, productive
experience, virtuous institutional inter-linkages
and stimulation of demand it takes time and
experimentation - Innovation and transformation involves creative
destruction (including of jobs), thus there is a
need to - facilitate cross-sectoral mobility and skills
upgrading - explicitly foster innovation to address the needs
of more labour intensive sectors/segments
particularly in rural areas - and to foster
delivery platforms for services aimed at the poor
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6- Employment centered social protection programmes
Safety nets or pathways out of poverty? - While public employment programmes can (rightly)
be viewed as a symptom of the employment deficit
in the economy they can also provide a platform
for innovation and help to underpin investments
in service delivery and asset creation
under-served areas.and serve as a transitional
mechanism for the creation of jobs
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7Public Employment Programmes (PEPs) an overview
- Conventionally, public works have long been
considered a staple of social assistance
programmes with the objective of short-term
consumption smoothing and insurance functions - Two traditions
- Public works have long been organized in
situations of drought or to combat seasonal
unemployment by providing short-term employment
on labor-intensive projects such as road
construction, maintenance, small-scale irrigation
and water conservation works - Public works have also been designed as workfare
programmes in the context of short-term safety
nets to address temporary job-losses - However,
- viewing work only as a conditionality for payment
works against a focus on value of assets and
services provided - Short term safety net approach works against the
development of programme capacities and synergies
with complementary programmes - New approaches point to multi-year funding
frameworks and include rights-based programmes
and guarantees
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8Role of public employment programmes
- PEPs can play a bridging role with regard to
- Addressing deficits in the provision of services
and potentially providing a pathway to better
jobs - Fostering investment in assets and services
relevant for the poor and under-served areas - Ensuring stabilization of demand and incomes
relevant for economic resilience - Providing a platform for innovation in the
delivery of services - If so, PEPs need to be linked to
- Macro-economic and structural transformation
policies to promote employment-rich inclusive
growth - Policies to enhance employability, training and
skills development - Promotion of private sector development and
entrepreneurship - These linkages are easier to foster when there
is a long-term development framework for
employment programmes
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9Promotional Social Protection Important to
recognize inter-linkages and hybrid nature of PEPs
Labor Markets Reduction in working poverty
through potential impact on wage levels and
number of days worked
Human Capital consumption smoothing and support
to investments in human capital
Promotion of Livelihood Opportunities (through a
long-term development approach)
Assets and services 1st and 2nd round impacts
on livelihoods, increased viability of
self-employment and investments in human capital
10Public Employment Programmes Issues
- Useful asset creation requires a focus on assets
and work not just creation of work (workfare),
technical capacity (that can be built over the
long term), accountability and participatory
inputs. - In many cases the problem is high levels of
working poverty coupled with high wage levels for
a few hence there is a role for the employment
guarantee in setting a wage floor - Impact on private sector is mixed they gain from
local demand for their products while
experiencing some potential increases in wage
costs and competition for workers - Both the private sector and society at large can
benefit from the work experience gained as well
as from the training (and/or education support)
received by beneficiaries of public employment
programmes.
11Recent Innovations in Rethinking Design/Role of
PEPs
- Go beyond a focus on cash for work to focus on
job creation and useful asset and service
provision - Multi-year funding and implementation frameworks
- Multiple focus areas conventional infrastructure
and social services (EPWP) and natural resource
management (EPWP, MGNREGA) - Catalytic Social Information and Delivery
Systems Can be deployed for complementary
programmes and can help to catalyze service
provision in other-wise under-served areas e.g.
financial and digital inclusion - Strong Transparency and accountability frameworks
useful for other programmes and empowerment for
social justice - Facilitate a shift from stand-alone to
complementary programming
12MGNREGA (India) Service Delivery Platform
Innovation
- Rights based framework making the state
legally accountable for providing work (100
days/rural HH) - Decentralized implementation with technical
support and participatory selection of projects - Mandates use of IT infrastructure this can also
foster businesses and digital inclusion. - Mandates payment through post offices/banks,
allows for banking correspondents and provides a
platform to test biometrically-enabled
micro-payments via linkage to UID - Mandates Social audits by the implementing agency
and allows for civil society role MGNREGA has
had impacts on the transparency and
accountability of other poverty reduction
programmes - Can be combined with sectoral initiatives through
convergence programmes to increase quality of
assets and services
Source Fabio Veras 2009
13NREGA Results to date
Employment Labour Market Impacts Assets, Services and productivity improvements Income
Increase in Agriculture Minimum Wages, wages earned/day annual income. (Source IIM Lucknow, NDUAT Faizabad) Livelihood diversification in rural areas (Source IIM Shillong, CSE, IHD) Financial Inclusion 8.8 crore accounts opened Improvement in ground water (Source ASCI, IHD) Reduction in water vulnerability indexes for water , agriculture, and livelihoods (Source IISc) Improved agricultural productivity cropping intensity (Source ASCI, IIT Roorkee) Increase in earnings/ HH 2006-07 Rs. 2795 2007-08 Rs. 3150 2008-09 Rs. 4060 Supplementary income source during non-agricultural seasons (Source IIM Ahmedabad) visible decline in levels of distress migration (Source Disha, NFIW, IHD, CSE)
Source Amita Sharma (2010)
14EPWP (South Africa) Green Jobs for the Poor and
Provision of early childhood development
- EPWP Social Sector
- The social sector had an innovative focus on
early childhood development (ECD) and community
home-based care (CBHC) to create jobs while
providing services to reach infants, young
children, and the sick members of vulnerable
households. - These services help alleviate unpaid care burdens
by providing support for the raising of children
and the care of the ill. (Antonopoulos) - EPWP environment sector
- E.g. Working for Water program which aimed to
enhance water security, restore the productive
potential of land and promote sustainable use of
natural resources and invest in marginalised
sectors of South African society
15Selected Sources
- Amita Sharma (2010) Mahatama Gandhi National
Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005 A Rights
based Law for inclusive growth
http//www.ipc-undp.org/pressroom/files/ipc130.pdf
- Maikel Lieuw-Kie-Song and Kate Philip, (2010)
Mitigating a Jobs Crisis Innovations in Public
Employment Programmes (IPEP) ILO Employment
Sector, Employment Report No.6 www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/
groups/public/---ed.../wcms_142973.pdf - Maikel Lieuw-Kie-Song (2009) Green Jobs for the
Poor A Public Employment Approach
http//content.undp.org/go/cms-service/download/pu
blication/?versionliveid1847980 - Maikel Lieuw-Kie-Song and Radhika Lal (2010)
Green Jobs for the Poor Why a Public Employment
Approach is Needed Now - Radhika Lal, Steve Miller, Maikel Lieuw-Kie-Song,
and Daniel Kostzer (2010) Public Works and
Employment Programmes Towards a Long-Term
Development Approach www.ipc-undp.org/pub/IPCWork
ingPaper66.pdf - Rania Antonopoulos, 2009. "Promoting Gender
Equality through Stimulus Packages and Public Job
Creation-- Lessons Learned from South Africas
Expanded Public Works Programme," Economics
Public Policy Brief Archive ppb_101 - Smita Gupta (2007) The Significance And
Limitations Of Indias National Rural Employment
Guarantee Act In Addressing Rural Poverty
www.networkideas.org/ideasact/jun07/Beijing.../Smi
ta_Gupta.ppt