Social Protection for the Informal Economy : Operational Lessons for Developing Countries in Africa and Beyond

The informal economy in Africa is large and diverse, and it is the main source of employment in the region. It is projected to grow and create more jobs. The informal economy is well established in the region, but it also faces a host of developmen...

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Main Authors: Guven, Melis, Jain, Himanshi, Joubert, Clement
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/946341635913066829/Social-Protection-for-the-Informal-Economy-Operational-Lessons-for-Developing-Countries-in-Africa-and-Beyond
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36584
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spelling okr-10986-365842021-11-18T05:11:09Z Social Protection for the Informal Economy : Operational Lessons for Developing Countries in Africa and Beyond Guven, Melis Jain, Himanshi Joubert, Clement CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 PANDEMIC RESPONSE POVERTY SOCIAL PROTECTION INFORMAL SECTOR ECONOMIC SHOCK VULNERABILITY ECONOMIC INCLUSION SOCIAL SAFETY NET SOCIAL INSURANCE DIGITAL PLATFORM IDENTIFICATION The informal economy in Africa is large and diverse, and it is the main source of employment in the region. It is projected to grow and create more jobs. The informal economy is well established in the region, but it also faces a host of development challenges. It is characterized by low human capital and productivity compared with the formal economy and is typically associated with limited access to resources such as electricity, finance, land, and public services. People who work in the informal economy are usually more susceptible to short-term shocks and the more catastrophic consequences of idiosyncratic shocks (acute short-term crises, such as illness) and covariate shocks (chronic or widespread shocks affecting entire communities). These vulnerabilities are exacerbated because these people ordinarily have limited avenues to formal financial institutions or risk mitigation instruments. Women are more likely to work in the informal economy in Africa and are therefore also more likely to experience precarious work environments. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the vulnerabilities of the vast informal economy, especially in urban areas. Social protection cash transfers provided an essential platform for delivering assistance in response to the COVID-19 shock in the Africa region. In addition to macroeconomic measures to support economic recovery, governments needed to limit the damage to livelihoods, especially in the informal economy. Many governments in the region added to their capacity to extend coverage with innovations in targeting and delivering payments by leveraging technology and using big data. In many cases, registration was carried out using mobile technology. Some governments opted to implement more direct registration processes by creating dedicated websites or relying on informal economy associations. These swift responses were success stories in their own right, but they were undertaken essentially as a response to an urgent requirement to provide much-needed support to groups that lacked social protection and to prevent them from slipping into poverty. Governments allocated significant resources, typically through external financing (US6.1 billion dollars in additional spending in 30 countries across Africa). 2021-11-17T15:09:20Z 2021-11-17T15:09:20Z 2021-11-03 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/946341635913066829/Social-Protection-for-the-Informal-Economy-Operational-Lessons-for-Developing-Countries-in-Africa-and-Beyond http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36584 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Social Protection Study Africa Sub-Saharan Africa
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC RESPONSE
POVERTY
SOCIAL PROTECTION
INFORMAL SECTOR
ECONOMIC SHOCK
VULNERABILITY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
SOCIAL SAFETY NET
SOCIAL INSURANCE
DIGITAL PLATFORM
IDENTIFICATION
spellingShingle CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC RESPONSE
POVERTY
SOCIAL PROTECTION
INFORMAL SECTOR
ECONOMIC SHOCK
VULNERABILITY
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
SOCIAL SAFETY NET
SOCIAL INSURANCE
DIGITAL PLATFORM
IDENTIFICATION
Guven, Melis
Jain, Himanshi
Joubert, Clement
Social Protection for the Informal Economy : Operational Lessons for Developing Countries in Africa and Beyond
geographic_facet Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
description The informal economy in Africa is large and diverse, and it is the main source of employment in the region. It is projected to grow and create more jobs. The informal economy is well established in the region, but it also faces a host of development challenges. It is characterized by low human capital and productivity compared with the formal economy and is typically associated with limited access to resources such as electricity, finance, land, and public services. People who work in the informal economy are usually more susceptible to short-term shocks and the more catastrophic consequences of idiosyncratic shocks (acute short-term crises, such as illness) and covariate shocks (chronic or widespread shocks affecting entire communities). These vulnerabilities are exacerbated because these people ordinarily have limited avenues to formal financial institutions or risk mitigation instruments. Women are more likely to work in the informal economy in Africa and are therefore also more likely to experience precarious work environments. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the vulnerabilities of the vast informal economy, especially in urban areas. Social protection cash transfers provided an essential platform for delivering assistance in response to the COVID-19 shock in the Africa region. In addition to macroeconomic measures to support economic recovery, governments needed to limit the damage to livelihoods, especially in the informal economy. Many governments in the region added to their capacity to extend coverage with innovations in targeting and delivering payments by leveraging technology and using big data. In many cases, registration was carried out using mobile technology. Some governments opted to implement more direct registration processes by creating dedicated websites or relying on informal economy associations. These swift responses were success stories in their own right, but they were undertaken essentially as a response to an urgent requirement to provide much-needed support to groups that lacked social protection and to prevent them from slipping into poverty. Governments allocated significant resources, typically through external financing (US6.1 billion dollars in additional spending in 30 countries across Africa).
format Report
author Guven, Melis
Jain, Himanshi
Joubert, Clement
author_facet Guven, Melis
Jain, Himanshi
Joubert, Clement
author_sort Guven, Melis
title Social Protection for the Informal Economy : Operational Lessons for Developing Countries in Africa and Beyond
title_short Social Protection for the Informal Economy : Operational Lessons for Developing Countries in Africa and Beyond
title_full Social Protection for the Informal Economy : Operational Lessons for Developing Countries in Africa and Beyond
title_fullStr Social Protection for the Informal Economy : Operational Lessons for Developing Countries in Africa and Beyond
title_full_unstemmed Social Protection for the Informal Economy : Operational Lessons for Developing Countries in Africa and Beyond
title_sort social protection for the informal economy : operational lessons for developing countries in africa and beyond
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/946341635913066829/Social-Protection-for-the-Informal-Economy-Operational-Lessons-for-Developing-Countries-in-Africa-and-Beyond
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36584
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