Type | Working Paper - Issues in Social Protection, Discussion paper |
Title | Cash Benefits in Low-Income Countries: Simulating the Effects on Poverty Reduction for Senegal and Tanzania |
Author(s) | |
Issue | 15 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
URL | https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=933080 |
Abstract | In most African countries, the human right to social security is still far from being a reality for the majority of the population. Economic growth is very slow to trickle down to the most vulnerable groups of the population so as to improve their standards of living. Basic social cash transfers are increasingly recognized as an effective instrument to reduce chronic poverty in low-income countries. A recent policy paper from the Department for International Development of the United Kingdom states: “Unless specific measures are taken to reach the poorest, millions will continue to die needlessly or, at the very least, continue to suffer from inhumane living conditions …”. The Commission for Africa has also called for social cash transfers, by 2007, to be an integral part of national Social Protection Strategies. A conference co-hosted by the Government of Zambia and the African Union recommended that “…social transfer programmes – including the social pension and social transfers to vulnerable children, older persons, people with disabilities and households – be a more utilised policy option in African countries…” and that they be part of national social development plans, as specified in the concluding document to the conference. Both Senegal and Tanzania have achieved significant success in recent years to extend social security coverage in order to reduce poverty. The National Social Protection Strategy of Senegal, drafted in 2005, suggests the introduction of a universal minimum pension for all elderly not covered by any social insurance pension. In Tanzania, the National Strategy for Growth and the Reduction of Poverty includes some social cash transfer programmes for vulnerable groups of the population. Social cash transfers are increasingly recognized as an effective instrument in the reduction of poverty. The objective of the present study is to model the introduction of basic social cash transfer programmes on household welfare, poverty incidence and depth in two African countries: Senegal and Tanzania. Based on household budget survey data, a set of social cash transfers were modelled in terms of their impact on poverty reduction. In addition, a rough cost estimate of the simulated transfers is provided. |
» | Senegal - Deuxième Enquête Sénégalaise Auprès des Ménages 2001 |
» | Tanzania - Household Budget Survey 2000-2001 |