Reducing Poverty and Investing in People : The New Role of Safety Nets in Africa

For two decades, Africa’s strong economic growth has paved the way for poverty reduction. Nevertheless, high chronic poverty levels persist, and the gap between income groups in terms of human capital and access to basic services is growing. Also, poor households are vulnerable to frequent shocks. By providing regular, reliable support to poor households and helping them invest in productive activities, targeted interventions such as safety nets help reduce persistent poverty, reverse the trend of increasing inequality, and build household resilience. Until recently, safety nets were implemented only on an ad hoc basis in Africa. However, in the wake of the global economic crisis, policy makers are increasingly viewing safety nets as core instruments for reducing poverty and managing risk. Also a momentum toward rationalizing public spending to provide more adequate and targeted support to the poorest is emerging in response to growing evidence that safety nets can successfully reduce poverty and vulnerability and promote inclusive growth. This book assesses the status and analyzes the objectives, features, systems, performance, and financing of safety nets in 22 African countries. It then identifies how governments and donors can strengthen safety net systems and protect and promote poor and vulnerable people. Overall, the book finds that safety nets are on the rise in Africa and are beginning to evolve from fragmented stand-alone programs into integrated systems. Social protection programming has started to change from largely emergency food aid programs to regular, predictable safety nets including targeted cash transfers and cash-for-work programs. Some countries, including Ghana, Kenya, Rwanda, and Tanzania, are working toward consolidating their programs into a national system. Impact evaluations of safety nets in Africa are also increasingly being undertaken and, with recent research into the productive aspects of cash transfer programs, have yielded encouraging evidence that safety nets reduce poverty and vulnerability. The timely analysis of safety nets in Africa provides a solid foundation for evidence-based policy dialogue and programming. As a result of the growing body of evidence that safety nets contribute to inclusive growth, African decision makers are now putting safety nets high on their development agendas.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Monchuk, Victoria
Format: Publications & Research biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2014
Subjects:cash transfer, investing in the poor, poverty reduction, productive safety net, social protection, labor protection, public works, extreme poverty, safety net, targeting, transfer program, transfers, World Bank in Africa,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16256
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spelling dig-okr-10986162562021-04-23T14:03:28Z Reducing Poverty and Investing in People : The New Role of Safety Nets in Africa Monchuk, Victoria cash transfer investing in the poor poverty reduction productive safety net social protection labor protection public works extreme poverty safety net targeting transfer program transfers World Bank in Africa For two decades, Africa’s strong economic growth has paved the way for poverty reduction. Nevertheless, high chronic poverty levels persist, and the gap between income groups in terms of human capital and access to basic services is growing. Also, poor households are vulnerable to frequent shocks. By providing regular, reliable support to poor households and helping them invest in productive activities, targeted interventions such as safety nets help reduce persistent poverty, reverse the trend of increasing inequality, and build household resilience. Until recently, safety nets were implemented only on an ad hoc basis in Africa. However, in the wake of the global economic crisis, policy makers are increasingly viewing safety nets as core instruments for reducing poverty and managing risk. Also a momentum toward rationalizing public spending to provide more adequate and targeted support to the poorest is emerging in response to growing evidence that safety nets can successfully reduce poverty and vulnerability and promote inclusive growth. This book assesses the status and analyzes the objectives, features, systems, performance, and financing of safety nets in 22 African countries. It then identifies how governments and donors can strengthen safety net systems and protect and promote poor and vulnerable people. Overall, the book finds that safety nets are on the rise in Africa and are beginning to evolve from fragmented stand-alone programs into integrated systems. Social protection programming has started to change from largely emergency food aid programs to regular, predictable safety nets including targeted cash transfers and cash-for-work programs. Some countries, including Ghana, Kenya, Rwanda, and Tanzania, are working toward consolidating their programs into a national system. Impact evaluations of safety nets in Africa are also increasingly being undertaken and, with recent research into the productive aspects of cash transfer programs, have yielded encouraging evidence that safety nets reduce poverty and vulnerability. The timely analysis of safety nets in Africa provides a solid foundation for evidence-based policy dialogue and programming. As a result of the growing body of evidence that safety nets contribute to inclusive growth, African decision makers are now putting safety nets high on their development agendas. 2013-11-14T15:03:02Z 2013-11-14T15:03:02Z 2014 978-1-4648-0094-8 10.1596/978-1-4648-0094-8 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16256 en_US Directions in Development--Human Development; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Publication Africa Sub-Saharan Africa
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic cash transfer
investing in the poor
poverty reduction
productive safety net
social protection
labor protection
public works
extreme poverty
safety net
targeting
transfer program
transfers
World Bank in Africa
cash transfer
investing in the poor
poverty reduction
productive safety net
social protection
labor protection
public works
extreme poverty
safety net
targeting
transfer program
transfers
World Bank in Africa
spellingShingle cash transfer
investing in the poor
poverty reduction
productive safety net
social protection
labor protection
public works
extreme poverty
safety net
targeting
transfer program
transfers
World Bank in Africa
cash transfer
investing in the poor
poverty reduction
productive safety net
social protection
labor protection
public works
extreme poverty
safety net
targeting
transfer program
transfers
World Bank in Africa
Monchuk, Victoria
Reducing Poverty and Investing in People : The New Role of Safety Nets in Africa
description For two decades, Africa’s strong economic growth has paved the way for poverty reduction. Nevertheless, high chronic poverty levels persist, and the gap between income groups in terms of human capital and access to basic services is growing. Also, poor households are vulnerable to frequent shocks. By providing regular, reliable support to poor households and helping them invest in productive activities, targeted interventions such as safety nets help reduce persistent poverty, reverse the trend of increasing inequality, and build household resilience. Until recently, safety nets were implemented only on an ad hoc basis in Africa. However, in the wake of the global economic crisis, policy makers are increasingly viewing safety nets as core instruments for reducing poverty and managing risk. Also a momentum toward rationalizing public spending to provide more adequate and targeted support to the poorest is emerging in response to growing evidence that safety nets can successfully reduce poverty and vulnerability and promote inclusive growth. This book assesses the status and analyzes the objectives, features, systems, performance, and financing of safety nets in 22 African countries. It then identifies how governments and donors can strengthen safety net systems and protect and promote poor and vulnerable people. Overall, the book finds that safety nets are on the rise in Africa and are beginning to evolve from fragmented stand-alone programs into integrated systems. Social protection programming has started to change from largely emergency food aid programs to regular, predictable safety nets including targeted cash transfers and cash-for-work programs. Some countries, including Ghana, Kenya, Rwanda, and Tanzania, are working toward consolidating their programs into a national system. Impact evaluations of safety nets in Africa are also increasingly being undertaken and, with recent research into the productive aspects of cash transfer programs, have yielded encouraging evidence that safety nets reduce poverty and vulnerability. The timely analysis of safety nets in Africa provides a solid foundation for evidence-based policy dialogue and programming. As a result of the growing body of evidence that safety nets contribute to inclusive growth, African decision makers are now putting safety nets high on their development agendas.
format Publications & Research
topic_facet cash transfer
investing in the poor
poverty reduction
productive safety net
social protection
labor protection
public works
extreme poverty
safety net
targeting
transfer program
transfers
World Bank in Africa
author Monchuk, Victoria
author_facet Monchuk, Victoria
author_sort Monchuk, Victoria
title Reducing Poverty and Investing in People : The New Role of Safety Nets in Africa
title_short Reducing Poverty and Investing in People : The New Role of Safety Nets in Africa
title_full Reducing Poverty and Investing in People : The New Role of Safety Nets in Africa
title_fullStr Reducing Poverty and Investing in People : The New Role of Safety Nets in Africa
title_full_unstemmed Reducing Poverty and Investing in People : The New Role of Safety Nets in Africa
title_sort reducing poverty and investing in people : the new role of safety nets in africa
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16256
work_keys_str_mv AT monchukvictoria reducingpovertyandinvestinginpeoplethenewroleofsafetynetsinafrica
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