In a nutshell
- Households’ social protection coverage by at least one program (non-contributory transfers, retirement pensions, or social insurance contributions in employment) dropped from 68% of households in 2006 to 56% in 2018, rising slightly to 58% in 2023, representing 16 million households.
- Social insurance contributions were the main coverage source in 2006 and 2012 but declined by 2018 and 2023 due to increased employment informality.
- Retirement pensions grew the fastest, covering 29% of households in 2023, up from 26% in 2006, likely due to population aging.
- Households without any form of social protection coverage tend to remain uncovered over time.
- There is limited integration across social assistance and contributory systems as few pathways exist for households on non-contributory aid to transition to contributory schemes, due to limited access to formal jobs.
- Social protection policies need to integrate tools and interventions whereby there is continuity and integration between forms of protection to enable a synergistic and comprehensive social protection system and coverage.
- Policy priorities should include promoting stable, inflation-adjusted incomes and expanding social insurance access across household types.
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Research Fellows
Irène Selwaness
Associate Professor, Faculty of Economics and Political...
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Speakers
Hania Sholkamy
Associate Research Professor, Social Research Centre, The...