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Household Risk Management and Social Protection in Chile

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  • World Bank

Abstract

This volume takes a critical look at the country's social protection "system" - broadly defined to include policy interventions, public institutions, and the regulation of private institutions that lower the welfare costs of adverse shocks to income from job loss and extended unemployment, health episodes, old age, and life-time poverty - to determine if a system exists or simply a set of loosely coordinated programs. The study also assesses whether households are provided with appropriate tools to mitigate risks to their income, identifying gaps in coverage and where instruments are missing. As well, the study provides the Government with a set of guidelines grounded in a conceptual framework that, if carefully applied, could increase the effectiveness of social protection. The author of the study finds that Chile succeeds in providing households with the instruments that they need to mitigate shocks to income. The institutions Chile has put in place to help households lower losses from these shocks - from the new unemployment insurance system, the retirement security system and the mixed health insurance system - are generally appropriately designed to match the nature of the risks they are intended to cover. Yet, while still in a minority, too many Chilean households - even among the non poor - do not have access to the sophisticated, state of the art social protection institutions that are in place.

Suggested Citation

  • World Bank, 2005. "Household Risk Management and Social Protection in Chile," World Bank Publications - Books, The World Bank Group, number 14839.
  • Handle: RePEc:wbk:wbpubs:14839
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Lissette Aliaga Linares, 2011. "Socio-Spatial Implications of Street Market Regulation Policy: The Case of Ferias Libres in Santiago de Chile," WIDER Working Paper Series 011, World Institute for Development Economic Research (UNU-WIDER).
    2. Joya, N.E.A., 2007. "Dreams that do not come true: Re-addressing social security to expand old-age social protection," ISS Working Papers - General Series 18755, International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University Rotterdam (ISS), The Hague.
    3. Lissette Aliaga Linares, 2011. "Socio-Spatial Implications of Street Market Regulation Policy: The Case of Ferias Libres in Santiago de Chile," WIDER Working Paper Series wp-2011-011, World Institute for Development Economic Research (UNU-WIDER).
    4. Guzmán, Julio, 2018. "Macroeconomic shocks and policy reforms: lessons from the 1999 downturn in Chile," Revista CEPAL, Naciones Unidas Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (CEPAL), August.

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