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Financing social protection floors: Considerations of fiscal space

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  • Elliott Harris

Abstract

The effectiveness of social protection in combating poverty and vulnerability, cushioning shocks, attenuating inequality, and supporting long‐term growth is well‐established, but effective social protection systems have long been seen as an unaffordable luxury in many developing and low‐income countries. The social protection floor concept aims at providing a guaranteed minimum of social protection at a reasonable cost, even in resource‐constrained circumstances, serving as a platform for the gradual implementation of a full social protection system. Introducing and maintaining or extending the floor requires the mobilization of fiscal space, both immediately and in the future. The article argues that efforts to generate fiscal space must carefully consider issues of predictability, as well as the impact of present funding choices on fiscal and debt sustainability, macroeconomic stability, inequality, poverty reduction and growth, and hence on future fiscal space. It examines from this perspective some of the implications of generating fiscal space through additional domestic resource mobilization, expenditure reallocation or efficiency gains, reduction of debt service, or external funding. The article also presents some evidence of a wide range of recent interventions that have been financed at reasonable cost on a sustainable basis in countries at different levels of income and development, using both own resources and external funds.

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  • Elliott Harris, 2013. "Financing social protection floors: Considerations of fiscal space," International Social Security Review, John Wiley & Sons, vol. 66(3-4), pages 111-143, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:wly:intssr:v:66:y:2013:i:3-4:p:111-143
    DOI: 10.1111/issr.12021
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    Cited by:

    1. Ahmed Raza ul Mustafa & Mohammad Nishat & Asif Ali Abro, 2022. "Social Protection Spending in Context of Structural and Institutional Performance: A Global Empirical Analysis," Social Indicators Research: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal for Quality-of-Life Measurement, Springer, vol. 163(2), pages 875-899, September.
    2. Hyejin Ko, 2020. "Measuring fiscal sustainability in the welfare state: fiscal space as fiscal sustainability," International Economics and Economic Policy, Springer, vol. 17(2), pages 531-554, May.
    3. Jonathan Sibley & Alex Ivaschenko & Kerry Pagau & Tom Tanhchareun, 2014. "The New Ireland Social Pension," World Bank Publications - Reports 22525, The World Bank Group.
    4. Sèna Kimm Gnangnon & Jean-François Brun, 2020. "Tax reform and fiscal space in developing countries," Eurasian Economic Review, Springer;Eurasia Business and Economics Society, vol. 10(2), pages 237-265, June.
    5. Afrika Ndongozi-Nsabimana, 2020. "Tax revenues and social protection financing in African and Latin American countries," Post-Print hal-03098695, HAL.

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