Global Initiative Expands Social Protection Coverage

www.ilo.org/node/711576" data-entity-type="node" data-entity-uuid="9ada5f11-83b8-4360-a4ab-3876ca52241d" data-entity-substitution="canonical">4th International Conference on Financing for Development (FfD4), the International Labour Organization (ILO), together with the Global Partnership for Universal Social Protection (USP2030), launched a global initiative under the Sevilla Platform for Action. This initiative aims to expand the fiscal space for social protection with a view to extending social protection coverage by at least 2 percentage points per annum in countries where social protection is not yet universal. UN Member States reflected this commitment in paragraph 27i of the FfD4 Outcome document.

In her opening remarks, Jayati Ghosh, Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA, emphasized that in a world where austerity cuts are threatening social expenditure, securing a concrete commitment to expanding social protection coverage is a significant achievement.

4th International Conference on Financing for Development, Seville, event on the global initiative to extend social protection coverage

© ILO

4th International Conference on Financing for Development, Seville, event on the global initiative to extend social protection coverage

The ILO Director-General Gilbert F. Houngbo highlighted how critical it is to aim for increasing social protection coverage by at least 2 percentage points each year, at a time when 47.6 percent of the world's population still has no social protection at all to fall back on when they get sick or lose their job.

"Don't say this target is unachievable or too ambitious," Houngbo added, noting that between 2015 and 2023, 42 countries - mostly developing countries - were able to achieve annual growth rates in social protection coverage of at least 2 percentage points per year.

Maropene Ramokgopa, South Africa's Minister in the Presidency for Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation and Chair of the G20 Development Working Group, endorsed the commitment, emphasizing that social protection benefits are not simply an expense but an investment in human capital. She also underlined that progressive taxation, the tackling illicit financial flows, and managing and restructuring of sovereign debt must be at the heart of any plan aiming to expand the fiscal space for social protection.

Wellington Dias, Brazil's Minister of State for Social Development and Assistance, Family, and the Fight Against Hunger, emphasized the dual role of progressive taxation in both reducing inequality and helping governments finance social protection. He endorsed the target of increasing social protection coverage by 2 percentage points and highlighted that President Lula's Global Alliance Against Hunger and Poverty will be key for achieving this target. The Government of Uzbekistan representative also stressed that the UN Global Accelerator on Jobs and Social Protection for Just Transitions, especially through its roadmaps, is another concrete vehicle to provide the needed technical support to expand the fiscal space for social protection to extend coverage by at least 2 percentage-points.

The target of expanding social protection coverage by at least 2 percentage points was also welcomed and endorsed by the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC). "Social protection is a vital pillar of our call for a New Social Contract. It has also been an essential demand of the ITUC in the UN financing for development debate for many years," said Giulia Massobrio, ITUC TUDCN Coordinator. She also emphasized that to achieve decent work for all, it is essential to combine social protection with other measures, such as formalizing employment, ensuring living wages, equal pay for work of equal value, supporting upskilling and reskilling, and investing in the care economy.

While the Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors supported the 2-percentage-point target it pointed out that it is not ambitious enough to achieve universality by 2030, nor does it address the adequacy of benefits. In response, ILO Director-General Gilbert F. Houngbo said, "The 2-percentage-point minimum target secures a clear place for the ILO's social protection agenda in the FfD4 outcome document for the next 10 years. But let me assure you: when the ILO engages at the country level, we look far beyond simply raising coverage by 2 percentage points. We work to strengthen the entire social protection system - making sure benefits are also truly adequate to meet people's needs."

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