Republic of Zambia Social Protection and Jobs Public Expenditure Review 2021

The Government of the Republic of Zambia (GRZ) has an ambitious long-term vision for the nation and its people, operationalized through the national development plans. A rapid increase in public spending financed through borrowing, due to lack of a concomitant increase in public revenue, meant a ballooning of nondiscretionary spending in lieu of discretionary spending. Overall poverty is estimated to have consistently increased since 2015 and, in fact, has rapidly increased in 2020 driven by the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Natural disasters and market fluctuations have been a common feature of the Zambian context even before COVID-19, with natural disasters becoming more prominent in rural areas and disproportionately affecting poorer households. Human capital has shown significant improvements in terms of health outcomes and education access, but without similar gains in quality of education, Zambia lags behind regional peers, and the poor are worst off. COVID-19’s negative effects will not only affect those that are directly impacted, but will be felt across the population and, in many cases, across generations, eroding decades of progress in human capital. Jobs and economic inclusion (JEI) programs are being implemented across seven ministries, with little coordination and minimal coverage.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: UNICEF, World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021-10-08
Subjects:POVERTY, INEQUALITY, HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT, JOBS, PUBLIC SPENDING, SOCIAL ASSISTANCE, CASH TRANSFERS, KEEPING GIRLS IN SCHOOL, HOME-GROWN SCHOOL MEALS, SPENDING EFFICIENCY, ECONOMIC INCLUSION, WOMEN'S LIVELIHOODS, NATIONAL PENSION SCHEME, PUBLIC SERVICE PENSION, INFORMAL SECTOR,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/443591633674322885/Zambia-Social-Protection-and-Jobs-Public-Expenditure-Review-2021
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36893
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spelling dig-okr-10986368932022-02-01T05:10:36Z Republic of Zambia Social Protection and Jobs Public Expenditure Review 2021 UNICEF World Bank POVERTY INEQUALITY HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT JOBS PUBLIC SPENDING SOCIAL ASSISTANCE CASH TRANSFERS KEEPING GIRLS IN SCHOOL HOME-GROWN SCHOOL MEALS SPENDING EFFICIENCY ECONOMIC INCLUSION WOMEN'S LIVELIHOODS NATIONAL PENSION SCHEME PUBLIC SERVICE PENSION INFORMAL SECTOR The Government of the Republic of Zambia (GRZ) has an ambitious long-term vision for the nation and its people, operationalized through the national development plans. A rapid increase in public spending financed through borrowing, due to lack of a concomitant increase in public revenue, meant a ballooning of nondiscretionary spending in lieu of discretionary spending. Overall poverty is estimated to have consistently increased since 2015 and, in fact, has rapidly increased in 2020 driven by the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Natural disasters and market fluctuations have been a common feature of the Zambian context even before COVID-19, with natural disasters becoming more prominent in rural areas and disproportionately affecting poorer households. Human capital has shown significant improvements in terms of health outcomes and education access, but without similar gains in quality of education, Zambia lags behind regional peers, and the poor are worst off. COVID-19’s negative effects will not only affect those that are directly impacted, but will be felt across the population and, in many cases, across generations, eroding decades of progress in human capital. Jobs and economic inclusion (JEI) programs are being implemented across seven ministries, with little coordination and minimal coverage. 2022-01-31T18:17:08Z 2022-01-31T18:17:08Z 2021-10-08 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/443591633674322885/Zambia-Social-Protection-and-Jobs-Public-Expenditure-Review-2021 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36893 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Public Expenditure Review Africa Africa Eastern and Southern (AFE) Zambia
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic POVERTY
INEQUALITY
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT
JOBS
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CASH TRANSFERS
KEEPING GIRLS IN SCHOOL
HOME-GROWN SCHOOL MEALS
SPENDING EFFICIENCY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
WOMEN'S LIVELIHOODS
NATIONAL PENSION SCHEME
PUBLIC SERVICE PENSION
INFORMAL SECTOR
POVERTY
INEQUALITY
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT
JOBS
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CASH TRANSFERS
KEEPING GIRLS IN SCHOOL
HOME-GROWN SCHOOL MEALS
SPENDING EFFICIENCY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
WOMEN'S LIVELIHOODS
NATIONAL PENSION SCHEME
PUBLIC SERVICE PENSION
INFORMAL SECTOR
spellingShingle POVERTY
INEQUALITY
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT
JOBS
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CASH TRANSFERS
KEEPING GIRLS IN SCHOOL
HOME-GROWN SCHOOL MEALS
SPENDING EFFICIENCY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
WOMEN'S LIVELIHOODS
NATIONAL PENSION SCHEME
PUBLIC SERVICE PENSION
INFORMAL SECTOR
POVERTY
INEQUALITY
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT
JOBS
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CASH TRANSFERS
KEEPING GIRLS IN SCHOOL
HOME-GROWN SCHOOL MEALS
SPENDING EFFICIENCY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
WOMEN'S LIVELIHOODS
NATIONAL PENSION SCHEME
PUBLIC SERVICE PENSION
INFORMAL SECTOR
UNICEF
World Bank
Republic of Zambia Social Protection and Jobs Public Expenditure Review 2021
description The Government of the Republic of Zambia (GRZ) has an ambitious long-term vision for the nation and its people, operationalized through the national development plans. A rapid increase in public spending financed through borrowing, due to lack of a concomitant increase in public revenue, meant a ballooning of nondiscretionary spending in lieu of discretionary spending. Overall poverty is estimated to have consistently increased since 2015 and, in fact, has rapidly increased in 2020 driven by the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Natural disasters and market fluctuations have been a common feature of the Zambian context even before COVID-19, with natural disasters becoming more prominent in rural areas and disproportionately affecting poorer households. Human capital has shown significant improvements in terms of health outcomes and education access, but without similar gains in quality of education, Zambia lags behind regional peers, and the poor are worst off. COVID-19’s negative effects will not only affect those that are directly impacted, but will be felt across the population and, in many cases, across generations, eroding decades of progress in human capital. Jobs and economic inclusion (JEI) programs are being implemented across seven ministries, with little coordination and minimal coverage.
format Report
topic_facet POVERTY
INEQUALITY
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT
JOBS
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CASH TRANSFERS
KEEPING GIRLS IN SCHOOL
HOME-GROWN SCHOOL MEALS
SPENDING EFFICIENCY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
WOMEN'S LIVELIHOODS
NATIONAL PENSION SCHEME
PUBLIC SERVICE PENSION
INFORMAL SECTOR
author UNICEF
World Bank
author_facet UNICEF
World Bank
author_sort UNICEF
title Republic of Zambia Social Protection and Jobs Public Expenditure Review 2021
title_short Republic of Zambia Social Protection and Jobs Public Expenditure Review 2021
title_full Republic of Zambia Social Protection and Jobs Public Expenditure Review 2021
title_fullStr Republic of Zambia Social Protection and Jobs Public Expenditure Review 2021
title_full_unstemmed Republic of Zambia Social Protection and Jobs Public Expenditure Review 2021
title_sort republic of zambia social protection and jobs public expenditure review 2021
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021-10-08
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/443591633674322885/Zambia-Social-Protection-and-Jobs-Public-Expenditure-Review-2021
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36893
work_keys_str_mv AT unicef republicofzambiasocialprotectionandjobspublicexpenditurereview2021
AT worldbank republicofzambiasocialprotectionandjobspublicexpenditurereview2021
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