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Asia-Pacific needs to improve social protection

By Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana and Chihoko Asada Miyakawa | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2020-10-20 08:13
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In the fight against COVID-19, success has so far been defined by responses in Asia and the Pacific. Many countries in the Asia-Pacific region have been hailed as reference points in containing the virus.

Yet if the region is to build back better, the success of immediate responses should not distract from the weaknesses COVID-19 has laid bare. Too many people in our region are left to fend for themselves in times of need. This pandemic has been no exception. Comprehensive social protection systems could right this wrong. Building these systems must be central to our long-term recovery strategy.

Illness or unemployment, pregnancy or old age, disability or injury should never be allowed to push people into poverty. During a pandemic, social protection schemes facilitate access to healthcare and provide lifelines when jobs are lost, rescuing households and stabilizing economies. This has been recognized by governments in the face of COVID-19. More than 300 new social protection measures have been taken across 40 countries in the region. Existing schemes have been strengthened, ad hoc packages rolled out, and investment increased.

This recent appreciation for social protection is welcome. And it must be maintained, because the most effective responses to COVID-19 have been from countries which had robust social protection systems in the first place. The logistics of taking measures during an unfolding crisis are complicated; setbacks and delays inevitable. Well-resourced social protection systems built over time are just better placed to deal with the unexpected. However, these systems still do not exist in many parts of the Asia-Pacific.

A recent report by the International Labour Organization and the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, "The Protection We Want", finds that more than half the region's population has no coverage whatsoever. Only a handful of countries have comprehensive social protection systems, and public spending in this area remains well below global average. In many countries in South Asia and the Pacific, public expenditure on social protection is as low as 2 percent of GDP.

Where social protection systems do exist, their coverage is riddled with gaps. The youngest, least educated and poorest are frequently left uncovered by medical services in the region. Many poverty targeted schemes never reach families most in need. Maternity, unemployment, sickness and disability benefits are the preserve of a minority of workers in the formal economy, leaving 70 percent of workers locked out of contributory schemes. Lower labor force participation among women accentuates gaps in coverage. Population aging, migration, urbanization and increasing natural disasters make social protection ever more urgent.

Investing in a basic level of social protection for everyone-a social protection floor-would immediately improve livelihoods. The UN's simulations across 13 developing countries in the region show that universal coverage of basic child benefits, disability benefits and old-age pensions would slash the proportion of recipient households living in poverty by up to 18 percentage points. The decrease in poverty would be greatest in Indonesia, followed by Sri Lanka. Purchasing power would surge in recipient households supporting increases in per capita consumption in the lowest income groups. In nine out of 13 countries analyzed, more than a third of the population currently living in poverty would no longer be impoverished.

These phenomenal development gains are within reach for most countries in the Asia-Pacific. Establishing basic schemes for children, older persons and persons with disabilities would cost between 2 and 6 percent of GDP. It is a significant investment, but affordable if we make universal social protection systems a fundamental part of broader national development strategies.

Yet it is not only the level of funding that matters, but the way the funds are spent. To achieve universal coverage, we need a pragmatic mix of contributory and non-contributory schemes. This would deliver a vital minimum level of protection regardless of previous income and support a gradual move to higher levels of protection through individual contributions.

New approaches to funding participation can extend social protection to workers in the informal economy. Schemes that reward unpaid care work and are complemented by subsidized childcare services can form a decisive step toward more inclusive and gender equal societies. And new technologies, including phone-based platforms, can accelerate delivery across populations.

As we focus on building back better in the aftermath of the pandemic, our region has an opportunity to make universal social protection a reality. In so doing, we could bring an end to the great injustice that leaves the vulnerable in our societies most exposed. Governments from across Asia-Pacific will convene later this month at ESCAP's Sixth Committee on Social Development to strengthen regional cooperation in this area. Let us seize the opportunity to accelerate progress toward universal social protection, and reduce poverty and inequality in Asia and the Pacific.

The vies don't necessarily reflect those of China Daily.

Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana is the UN under-secretary-general and executive secretary of ESCAP; and Chihoko Asada Miyakawa is the ILO regional director for Asia and the Pacific.

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