World Social Protection Report 2020-22
Dr. Jassim Taqui
DG Al-Bab Institute for Strategic Studies
Islamabad, September
3, 2021: GENEVA (ILO News) – Despite the unprecedented worldwide
expansion of social protection during the COVID-19 crisis, more than 4 billion
people around the world remain entirely unprotected, a new International Labour
Organization (ILO) report says.
It finds that the pandemic response was uneven and
insufficient, deepening the gap between countries with high and low-income
levels and failing to afford the much-needed social protection that all human
beings deserve.
Social protection includes access to health care
and income security, particularly about old age, unemployment, sickness,
disability, work injury, maternity, or loss of the main income earner, as well
as for families with children.
“Countries are at a crossroads,” said ILO
Director-General, Guy Ryder. “This is a pivotal moment to harness the pandemic
response to build a new generation of rights-based social protection systems.
These can cushion people from future crises and give workers and businesses the
security to tackle the multiple transitions ahead with confidence and with
hope. We must recognize that effective and comprehensive social protection is
not just essential for social justice and decent work but for creating a
sustainable and resilient future too.”
The World Social Protection Report 2020-22: Social
protection at the crossroads – in pursuit of a better future gives a global
overview of recent developments in social protection systems, including social
protection floors, and covers the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The report
identifies protection gaps and sets out key policy recommendations, including the
targets of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Currently, only 47 percent of the global
population are effectively covered by at least one social protection benefit,
while 4.1 billion people (53 percent) obtain no income security at all from
their national social protection system.
There are significant regional inequalities in
social protection. Europe and Central Asia have the highest rates of coverage,
with 84 percent of people being covered by at least one benefit. The Americas
are also above the global average, with 64.3 percent. Asia and the Pacific (44
percent), the Arab States (40 percent), and Africa (17.4 percent) have marked
coverage gaps.
Worldwide, the vast majority of children still
have no effective social protection coverage – only one in four children (26.4
percent) receives a social protection benefit. Only 45 percent of women with
newborns worldwide receive a cash maternity benefit. Only one in three persons
with severe disabilities (33.5 percent) worldwide receive a disability benefit.
Coverage of unemployment benefits is even lower; only 18.6 percent of
unemployed workers worldwide are effectively covered. And while 77.5 percent of
people above retirement age receive some form of old-age pension, major
disparities remain across regions, between rural and urban areas, and between
women and men.
Government spending on social protection also
varies significantly. On average, countries spend 12.8 percent of their gross
domestic product (GDP) on social protection (excluding health), however,
high-income countries spend 16.4 percent, and low-income countries only 1.1 percent
of their GDP on social protection.
The report says that the financing gap (the
additional spending required to ensure at least minimum social protection for
all) has increased by approximately 30 percent since the start of the COVID-19
crisis.
To guarantee at least basic social protection
coverage, low-income countries would need to invest an additional US$77.9
billion per year, lower-middle-income countries an additional US$362.9 billion
per year, and upper-middle-income countries a further US$750.8 billion per
year. That’s equivalent to 15.9, 5.1, and 3.1 percent of their GDP,
respectively.
“There is an enormous push for countries to move
to fiscal consolidation, after the massive public expenditure of their crisis
response measures, but it would be seriously damaging to cut back on social
protection; investment is required here and now,” said Shahra Razavi, Director,
ILO Social Protection Department.
“Social protection is an important tool that can
create wide-ranging social and economic benefits for countries at all levels of
development. It can underpin better health and education, greater equality,
more sustainable economic systems, better-managed migration, and the observance
of core rights. Building the systems that can deliver these positive outcomes
will require a mix of financing sources and greater international solidarity,
particularly with support for poorer countries. But the benefits of success
will reach beyond national borders to benefit us all,” she said.
Specific measures to promote universal social
protection was highlighted in the Global Call to Action for a human-centered
recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. The Call to Action, which outlines a
comprehensive agenda for recovery was endorsed unanimously in June 2021 by the
ILO’s Member States, representing governments, workers’ and employers’
organizations.
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