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venerdì, Feb 21

Social Protection Programs for Africa’s Drylands (World Bank Studies)


Price: EUR 15,65
(as of Feb 21, 2020 04:47:36 UTC – Details)



Social Protection Programs for Africa’s Drylands explores the role of social protection in promoting
the well-being and prosperity of people living in dryland regions of Sub-Saharan Africa, with a
specifi c focus on the Sahel and the Horn of Africa. Based on a review of recent experience, it argues
that social protection policies and programs have an important role in promoting the resilience of
the people residing in these areas. Social protection programs, when well designed and carefully
implemented at scale, can reduce vulnerability to droughts and other shocks and promote coping
capacity.
If present trends continue, by 2030 dryland regions of East and West Africa will be home to an
estimated 429 million people, up to 24 percent of whom will be living in chronic poverty. Many
others will depend on livelihood strategies that are sensitive to the shocks that will hit the region
with increasing frequency and severity, making them vulnerable to falling into transient poverty.
Social protection programs will be needed in the drylands to provide support to those unable to
meet their basic needs. Some of these people will require long-term support, while others will
require periodic short-term support because of income losses due to shocks (for example, crop
failure following a drought) or as a result of lifecycle changes (for example, loss of a breadwinner).
Safety net programs can increase resilience in the short term by improving coping capacity of
vulnerable households. Rapidly scalable safety nets that provide cash, food, or other resources to
shock-affected households can allow them to recover from unexpected shocks. Scaling up an
existing safety net program can be far less expensive than relying on appeals for humanitarian
assistance to meet urgent needs.
Social protection programs can increase resilience over the longer term by reducing sensitivity to
shocks of vulnerable households especially if combined with other development programs. Providing
predictable support to chronically poor households and enabling them to invest in productive
assets and access basic social services can effectively reduce these households’ sensitivity to future
shocks, help them participate in the growth process, and take advantage of the investments made in
agricultural and pastoralist activities proposed in the drylands.