The Political Economy of Targeted Safety Nets
To be successful, Social Safety Net (SSN) programs require three elements of policy design: technical correctness, administrative feasibility and political viability; yet the politically supportable aspect is often neglected. In this note, several...
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Format: | Brief |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/01/6240095/political-economy-targeted-safety-nets http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11784 |
Summary: | To be successful, Social Safety Net
(SSN) programs require three elements of policy design:
technical correctness, administrative feasibility and
political viability; yet the politically supportable aspect
is often neglected. In this note, several features of
political economy applicable to the choice, design, and
implementation of safety net programs are discussed:
modeling the electoral politics of targeting; the roles of
attitudes and perceptions; centralized versus localized
control; internal and organizational politics, and finally,
politics and the different social objectives of safety ropes
and safety nets. The note discusses the political viability
of any SSN program, profoundly influenced by corruption and
the perceptions of horizontal equity, process and
administrative fairness, and effectiveness. Corruption
subverts all three perceptions, and so is especially
damaging to political support. Moreover, changes in the
average poverty rate mask enormous "churning" as
households move in and out of poverty. This volatility
creates the demand not just for transfer programs to those
whose incomes are chronically low (safety nets), but also
for insurance-like programs that would pay off not only when
income was absolutely low, but also when households
experienced negative shocks (safety ropes). While safety
"nets" seek to minimize income or expenditure
poverty, the objective of safety "ropes" is to
mitigate risk. If the targeting of social programs is judged
exclusively on poverty or benefit incidence based on a cross
sectional snapshot, then risk mitigation programs benefiting
households who have suffered large shocks, but who are not
"poor" may appear to have large
"leakage" when in fact they are simply serving an
alternative social objective. While a "safety net"
program might be more popular, the more effectively it
transfers from richer to poorer households, a "safety
rope" program might cause little net redistribution,
but be popular because it serves an important insurance function. |
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