One Nepali household in three suffers from some type of shock every year. We all remember the 2015 earthquake and the devastation it wrought. In its wake, the Nepali government set up a National Reconstruction Authority which took ages and much bureaucracy to support families to rebuild their houses. Meanwhile, every monsoon, landslides and flooding affect thousands of households. And then of course came COVID-19, which show more than half of the people lose their job or income, and almost 20% struggled to get food each day.
Each time a crisis hits, a cry goes up to the government to assist those in need, and after a while, they scramble to put specific schemes in place to then support people. So food was provided during COVID, or if somebody passes away in a road accident, another scheme exists, or for loss of cattle or a house, but each time with varying authorities and paperwork.
In an ideal world, everybody would be covered and enrolled in social security, and we could use already these existing schemes to very quickly provide the affected households with support or cash transfers. But only one third of the Nepali households is enrolled in some sort of scheme... So how can we reach them all and quickly adapt schemes to reach everyone in an appropriate way quickly after a shock?
This is what WSM Asia Coordinator Bruno Deceukelier and other distinguished panelists talked about in this 29 September 2022 webinar Financing shock responsive social protection, looking at various countries. Bruno presents INSP!R Nepal and the role of civil society and trade unions to advocate for adaptive social protection.
Speakers:
- Doerte Bosse, Head of Sector for horizontal coordination, social protection and disabilities, European Union Directorate-General for International Partnerships
- Céline Peyron Bista, SP&PFM Chief Technical Adviser, ILO
- Nupur Kukrety, Social Policy Specialist UNICEF
- Carlos Galian, Technical Officer, Social Protection Financing, ILO
- Bruno Deceukelier, WSM Asia Coordinator
- Getachew Berhanu Kebede, Social Policy Specialist, UNICEF
Moderator: Namrata Saraogi, Social Policy Specialist, UNICEF
As part of its knowledge exchange and communications initiative, the Programme is organizing a series of webinars to learn from country experiences and contribute to the international debate on innovative solutions to increase financing for strengthening national social protection systems to achieve universal coverage for all. This webinar was the second in a series, presenting concrete experiences on innovative options for financing building adaptive, responsive and resilient social protection systems. The webinar started with a presentation that provides insight into the Programme’s approach to strengthening social protection systems and making them more resilient to shocks. This was followed by country experiences.
You can watch the webinar on Youtube here and download the presentations here.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.