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THE LINKS BETWEEN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL POLICIES

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Title: THE LINKS BETWEEN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL POLICIES


1
THE LINKS BETWEEN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL POLICIES
JOSÉ ANTONIO OCAMPOUNDER-SECRETARY GENERAL
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL AFFAIRS
2
INITIAL CONSIDERATIONS
  • The United Nations Development Agenda
    recognizes the central role of the social, gender
    and environmental dimensions of development
  • But this integrated view is far from being
    reflected in practice
  • Rather, a leader/follower model prevails, in
    which economic policy is determined first, and
    other policies are called for to manage its
    social, gender and environmental outcomes

3
INITIAL CONSIDERATIONS
  • To implement the United Nations Development
    Agenda, we should thus move towards
    mainstreaming the social, gender and
    environmental dimensions into economic
    decision-making, at the global as well as at the
    national levels

4
FOUR MAJOR LINKS BETWEEN THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL
SYSTEMS
  • Ability of the economic system to offer
    opportunities for adequate income generation
  • Employment plays the central role.
  • Management of risks generated by the economic
    system and associated insecurity

5
FOUR MAJOR LINKS BETWEEN THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL
SYSTEMS
  • Ability of the social system to facilitate the
    accumulation of capabilities, and the associated
    effects on the functioning of the economic system
    (human capital)
  • Capacity of the economic system to provide
    adequate resources for that task, and the
    implications of the way the provision of services
    is organized

6
INCOME GENERATION
  • Growth facilitates the reduction of poverty, but
    not all growth is equally pro-poor
  • Two major concerns in this regard
  • Fairly widespread increase in income inequality
  • Poor employment generation, and rising labor
    market dualism

7
NOT ALL GROWTH IS EQUALLY PRO-POOR
8
CONTRIBUTIONS OF INTRA-COUNTRY INEQUALITY TO
WORLD INEQUALITY
9
POOR EMPLOYMENT GENERATION
10
RISING LABOR MARKET DUALISM
11
INCOME GENERATION
  • It is hard not to see here the adverse effects of
    market based reforms without adequate mechanisms
    in place to guarantee acceptable social outcomes
  • Also, growth may be more effective (indeed,
    essential) to reduce high levels of poverty, but
    redistributive policies may be essential at low
    levels of poverty

12
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
  • Employment generation should be at the center of
    economic policy, including macroeconomic policy
    and structural reforms
  • Accumulation of productive assets of the poor
  • Rural development is the crucial issue in poor
    countries, but economic opportunities for the
    urban poor become critical in middle-income
    countries
  • Need to consider bringing issues of income
    distribution to the center of economic policy

13
ECONOMIC INSECURITY
  • High risks of real macroeconomic volatility,
    particularly employment risks
  • Structural change requires a change in the
    structure of employment
  • In developing countries, the real exchange rate
    is crucial for both dimensions

14
ECONOMIC INSECURITY
  • Financial risks
  • Financial risks associated with pensions are
    increasingly shifting to households
  • Interest rate variations affect house mortgages
  • Interest rate variations also affect smallholder
    credit and production
  • Agricultural price variations affect smallholders

15
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
  • Adaptability of the labor force to change should
    be a major policy concern
  • but pure labor market flexibility with
    inadequate social protection has many downsides
  • Safety nets for macroeconomic crises should
    evolve into a component of well-designed and
    universal social protection systems
  • Need for a broader risk management framework,
    through public interventions or creation of
    markets to manage risks faced by the poor

16
DEVELOPMENT OF CAPABILITIES
  • Human development the capabilities provided by
    social policy are more than human capital they
    directly affect the well-being of individuals and
    societies, and other dimensions of development
    (e.g. political participation)
  • Low levels of human capital are a crucial element
    of the poverty trap

17
DEVELOPMENT OF CAPABILITIES
  • However, the links running from human development
    to economic development are not linear
  • Important risk in the absence of opportunities,
    there may be considerable waste and loss of
    human capital

18
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
  • Human development should be at the center of any
    development strategy
  • It is possible to make major advances even at low
    levels of development
  • A major effort to break out of the poverty trap
    of low-income countries should be at the center
    of international cooperation
  • Need to better understand ways to maximize the
    effects of social policy on economic development

19
IT IS POSSIBLE TO MAKE MAJOR ADVANCES EVEN AT LOW
LEVELS OF DEVELOPMENT
20
FINANCING AND DESIGN OF SOCIAL POLICY
  • There are significant differences in the levels
    of social spending at comparable levels of
    development countries spending little should
    raise it
  • There is also strong evidence that social
    spending and, particularly, social protection
    is associated with high levels of development
  • The redistributive effects of spending may be
    more important than those of taxation, though the
    latter are not irrelevant

21
FINANCING AND DESIGN OF SOCIAL POLICY
  • The stability of social spending is crucial.
    Instability reduces the efficiency of social
    investments
  • Universal policies may have stronger effects than
    targeted interventions if the aim is to reduce
    inequalities
  • The state always plays the central role, but
    social and private participation can help

22
SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCES IN THE LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SPENDING AT COMPARABLE LEVELS OF DEVELOPMENT
23
SOCIAL SPENDING PARTICULARLY, SOCIAL
PROTECTION IS ASSOCIATED WITH HIGH LEVELS OF
DEVELOPMENT
LLMIE lower income, UMIE upper middle, HIE
high income
24
SOCIAL SPENDING HAS BEEN INCREASING IN MIDDLE
INCOME COUNTRIES
LLMIE lower income, UMIE upper middle, HIE
high income
Source Kelly and Saiz-Omeñaca
25
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
  • Adequate and stable levels of social spending
    should be explicit objectives of economic policy
  • Some universal policies are essential even at low
    levels of development
  • It is important to guarantee access of the poor
    to social services targeting should be seen as
    an instrument, rather than as a substitute for
    universality

26
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
  • But a broader system of social protection may be
    impossible
  • The design of specific, targeted interventions
    should be, in the long run, part of universal
    systems
  • Private sector participation should be done in a
    framework that guarantees the basic principles of
    universality and solidarity

27
INSTITUTIONAL IMPLICATIONS
  • Poverty-reduction strategies can become the major
    instrument of integration of economic and social
    policies, particularly in poor countries
  • It is essential that, in this process, needs
    assessment become a regular practice
  • and that the leader/follower model be abandoned

28
INSTITUTIONAL IMPLICATIONS
  • In broader terms, it is essential that social
    objectives are explicitly mainstreamed into
    economic policy-making
  • Start by making visible the social effects of
    economic policies
  • Regular analysis of the social implications of
    budgets and tax reforms
  • Also, regular analysis of the distributive
    effects of other economic policies (e.g.
    agricultural and industrial interventions)

29
INSTITUTIONAL IMPLICATIONS
  • Go beyond inflation targeting towards the
    explicit incorporation of employment and output,
    as well as real exchange rate targeting, in
    monetary and exchange rate policy in developing
    countries

30
THE LINKS BETWEEN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL POLICIES
JOSÉ ANTONIO OCAMPOUNDER-SECRETARY GENERAL
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL AFFAIRS
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