Social Potection for the Harder Road Ahead : Containing the Social Costs of Lower Growth in Latin America and the Caribbean
During a decade of rapid growth, more jobs and higher wages dramatically reduced poverty and drove down historically high levels of inequality. Governments in the region complemented the gains from growth with investments in social protection polic...
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| Format: | Report |
| Language: | English en_US |
| Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2015
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| Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/10/25161277/social-protection-harder-road-ahead-containing-social-costs-lower-growthin-latin-america-caribbean http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22977 |
| Summary: | During a decade of rapid growth, more
jobs and higher wages dramatically reduced poverty and drove
down historically high levels of inequality. Governments in
the region complemented the gains from growth with
investments in social protection policies, further reducing
poverty and inequality. Countries in Latin America and the
Caribbean are rightfully proud of these achievements. As the
region prepares for a long period of slower growth and
tighter budgets, the value of their investment in building
social protection systems will grow. Social protection can
help protect social gains as labor earnings and employment
fall. The evidence accumulated from the region’s experience
of which social protection interventions work and which do
not, will be an essential resource to guide difficult policy
decisions. Countries will move ahead with the long run
development of their diverse social protection systems as
they are able. But in the shorter run three areas of policy
action will rise in priority: (i) protecting poor and
vulnerable people through the lean years; (ii) finding
fiscal savings in reforms to large and regressive items of
social policy; and (iii) fielding labor market initiatives
to support workers during a long, slack period and prepare
them for economic recovery. |
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