Verdensbanken fokuserer på sociale programmer i Latinamerika

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Despite recent record economic growth averaging five percent per year, the Latin American and Caribbean region has not escaped the effects of the global financial crisis now roiling the economies of developed countries. Growth rates are declining and in some countries unemployment and poverty rates are starting to increase.

To mitigate the effect of the crisis, the Worldbank is supporting efforts by several countries to strengthen and expand social safety net programs to protect hard-wrought social gains resulting from improved macroeconomic policies and social spending focused on the poorest segments of society over the past decade..

The capacity of core social protection systems before a crisis hits plays a key role in a country’s ability to help the poor in times of crisis. In countries in which basic systems are in place, safety nets can help protect the poor. When these systems are not in place, a country’s options for effective response are far more limited and risks emerge that policy makers could adopt less efficient interventions out of political need to demonstrate action.

Conditional Cash Transfer programs (CCTs) have become the prevalent model for income support in the region. They provide income support to poor households with children, while requiring the children’s participation in health, nutrition and education services. CCT programs have helped millions of people improve their social and economic status in recent years. These programs can temporarily increase the benefit levels or coverage to protect the poorest in the midst of a crisis.

-The Bank has been supporting safety nets in some countries for several years, starting after the crises of the late 1990s and early 2000s, and when the capacity is in place countries are better-positioned to protect vulnerable groups of the effects of the economic downturn, said Helena Ribe, sector manager for LAC’s Social Protection division.

CCTs Produce Tangible Results

At the end of December 2008, LAC had a 12-program portfolio, consisting primarily of CCT programs. Starting as pilot programs, CCTs have helped millions of families to improve their economic and social status and are providing a nexus to expanded access to social services for the poor.

Rigorous external evaluations of some CCT programs have measured tangible achievements in education and health outcomes among children participating in the program. Mexico’s vanguard Opportunidades program, established in 1997 on a trial basis, now serves five million families, or 25 percent of the population of the country. Results show that in rural areas, the probability of entering secondary school rose by 33 percent and enrollment rates in tertiary schools nearly doubled. In urban areas, the dropout rate among students 16-19 years fell by 20 percent while enrollment rates increased for children six to 18 years old. Meanwhile, families increased their health visits by up to 35 percent nationwide. Anemia in children under two fell by 12,8 percentage points and rural children from 0-5 had 20 percent fewer sick days.

Similar results were found in Colombia’s Familias en Accion program. Familias increased attendance rates for secondary school students by seven percentage points in rural areas and five percentage points in urban areas. Birth weight and nutrition levels in children also have increased, the result of increased food consumption, particularly in rural areas, reflected in greater protein intake and additional spending on food for children generally. Preventive health visits increased, vaccination coverage expanded and disease rates have fallen.

-Results tend to be greater in the upper levels of school, or in the transitions from primary to secondary. There is also evidence of a reduction in school dropout rates, better retention rates, and better transition rates, said Theresa Jones, lead operations officer with LAC’s social protection unit. -CCTs also have had a positive impact on health services utilization and improvements in child nutrition and food consumption are significant, she added.

Evaluations in Latin America have also convincingly shown that CCT programs have reduced poverty levels. In the four countries for which data are available, CCT programs reduced the national headcount poverty rate by eight percent in Ecuador and Mexico; 4,5 percent in Jamaica and three percent in Brazil.

Expanding Existing Projects, Launching New Operations

Four new Bank operations are supporting the initiation of new activities in Argentina, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Honduras. These projects will support programs to finance household transfers with a focus on improving, nutrition, school completion and access to skill development and employment opportunities. LAC also is supporting development policy lending to enhance safety net programs in El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica and Panama.

LAC is preparing to expand existing programs in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Haiti and Jamaica. As part of this expansion of activities, in December the World Bank Board approved a $636.5 million loan to Colombia to expand Familias, the fourth loan supporting the program. The program now will cover 1.7 million families through 2010.

In May, the Board approved a $40 million loan for Jamaica’s Program of Advancement Through Health and Education (PATH), Jamaica’s flagship social assistance program that will, among other things, pilot Steps-to-Work, a “second-generation” CCT program to refer adults from eligible beneficiary families to support services to enable them to seek and retain employment.

-We are looking at the needs of the entire family, we want the whole family to advance, said Cornelia M. Tesliuc, the Jamaica program’s task team leader.

Kilde: www.worldbank.org