Transcript Document

Overview
1. Context: Finance of the SDGs and Children
2. Social Protection National Financing:
Commitments and Practice
 Increased allocation for expansion in SSA
 Evaluating re-allocation of energy subsidies in MENA
3. What is our role as development partners?
Context: Financing of the SDGs
 Domestic resources increasingly dominate over
ODA in developing countries
 ..but ODA still important for LDCs
Example Sub-Saharan Africa:
Remittances
FDI
ODA
All other SSA
Government
expenditures
SSA LDC
government
expenditures
(Financial resources by source, years 2000-12. ONE data report)
UNICEF’s key FFD messages
1. Improve equitability of public spending
 Use public $$$ to complement private $$$ for those
underserved by private sector
 Provide universal basic services and social protection
floors
 Focus on poor groups, e.g. $1.25 poverty line, poorest
40%, disabled.
2. Ensure adequacy of spending on children
 Link economic growth to more and better spending
on children, especially in underfunded sectors with
large proven impacts on children (e.g. ECD, RMNCH,
nutrition, child protection, sanitation, etc.)
 Ensure non-retrogression of spending on children
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Four key messages
3. Strengthen international collaboration to improve child
wellbeing
 Better target ODA and concessional finance to
countries with greater needs
 Increase amount of ODA for children, including
through better monitoring and prioritization of
climate finance co-benefits, south-south cooperation,
etc.
 Use ODA to leverage domestic and private resources
4. Improve reporting on child related spending
 Report on revenues and expenditures that benefit
children
 Refine and harmonize child reporting standards
internationally
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Social Protection
National Financing:
Commitments and
Practice
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Commitments to national SP financing
Increasing recognition of need to provide adequate and
predictable national financing:
• AU Ministerial Declaration of the Ministers of Social
Development (May 2014)
• Allocation (and ring-fencing) of national resources to SP
• To support expansion of comprehensive SP systems
• ASEAN Declaration on Strengthening Social Protection
(2013):
• Allocate adequate financial resources in line with national
targets and subject to the capacity of each Government
• As strategy to extend coverage, availability, quality,
equitability and sustainability of SP
Some examples of country practice
Increasing allocations to support expansion in SSA
• Ghana : Used portion of the savings from fuel subsidy removal to
scale-up LEAP programme
– Budget allocation - 4 million USD in 2012 to 15 million USD in 2013
(increase of more than 300% of national contribution)
•
Zambia - massive expansion of CT coverage, predominantly
funded through tax revenue
– US$4 million in 2013  US$30 million in 2014
– expected: US$40 million in 2015, US$50 million in 2016
• Kenya: Progressively increasing government funding of the
National Safety Net Programme
– 47% of the total costs 2012/13 70% in 2013/14.
Some examples of country practice
Evaluating options in re-allocation of energy subsidy
spending in MENA
• Context of high spending on energy subsidies, and 8 countries
engaged in or considering reform
• UNICEF has supported a set of countries to examine the impacts
of energy subsidies on children and policy options in partial reallocation to social protection
– Working closely with government and other partners, but maintain
neutrality and be clear about child-sensitive and equity principles
– Research & analysis on benefit incidence, including HHs with children
– Simulation of poverty impacts of re-allocation to cash transfer
programmes
– Impact analysis of existing transfers on children
– Technical support to governments in design/modification of transfer
programmes
UNICEF Social Protection Work
an overview
Show and Tell on Social Protection
Bonn, 2011
What is our role
as development
partners?
Role of Development Partners: Reflections on
UNICEF experience
• Providing evidence is necessary but not sufficient
– Costing exercises, benefit incidence, impacts (poverty &
economic contribution!)
– Putting information in the right hands – the messenger
matters
• Working with governments to ID financing options
and other country practice
Role of Development Partners: Reflections on
UNICEF experience
• Politics and perception of affordability driving factor –
how do we support partners to build support within
national context
– address myths, e.g. dependency
– engaging and making case with MoF, exec office
– role of public communication – members of parliament, civil
society, and general public
– supporting countries, but also regional bodies
• Aligning strategies between development partners
critical, including joint mechanisms, e.g. SWAPs
UNICEF Social Protection Work
an overview
Thank you!
Show and Tell on Social Protection
Bonn, 2011
Contacts:
[email protected]
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