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UNRISD News Number 20


Spring/Summer 1999

ESSENTIAL MATTER

Financing Social Development: Issues for Discussion

Since the Social Summit, the question of how to improve the flow of resources for social development has been receiving considerable attention. But the search for new sources of funding, and for ways to make better use of existing resources, takes place against a backdrop of global economic crisis and deteriorating standards of living in many parts of the world.

Immediate action to improve the international economic environment must therefore be the first item on any agenda for improving the context in which social development can be promoted and financed. Today, a drop in a country's credit rating can wreak havoc with even the most carefully crafted national budget. A sudden fall in price for a key export commodity can have the same effect. The nature of the current financial and trade regime is adequate neither for generating the required level of resources in many countries nor for permitting their rational long-term use.

It is essential to stimulate growth and to confront the need for redistribution. Present economic and social structures concentrate the world's wealth in a few places, and among a few groups, while weakening the mechanisms that would direct resources toward areas of greatest need. The search for new approaches to finance social development must also take account of rapid technological change, and how this is redefining existing structures of livelihood and employment in developed and developing countries alike.

With these basic contextual elements in mind, UNRISD will examine a number of recent efforts to improve the flow of resources toward social development programmes in different regions and countries. In the tradition of previous work on social policy at the Institute, this study will be based on the assumption that mobilizing resources for development is, above all, a societal problem. Rather than providing a technical analysis, UNRISD networks will concentrate on questions of politics and priority-setting, institutional development and social change. Results of the study, structured around the following areas and issues, will be published in the forthcoming UNRISD report for Copenhagen Plus Five, Taking Global Responsibility for Social Development: Policy Reform and Institutional Change in the 1990s.

Donor and creditor initiatives
A first set of international initiatives to be examined by UNRISD should increase the availability of funds, currently in the hands of creditors or donors, that can be channelled by national governments toward programmes of social protection and social services.

Reducing the burden of foreign debt. International lenders have moved from initial intransigence toward somewhat greater willingness to renegotiate both private and public debt. But much remains to be done in this complex and rapidly evolving area. The debt burden is foreclosing economic growth and forcing down levels of social spending in the majority of countries around the world. What can be learned from recent experiences in the field of debt reduction, including the "HIPC Initiative" for the poorest and most highly indebted countries? How useful have these efforts been? How are potential beneficiaries defined and what kinds of conditionality are imposed? How are trends in indebtedness related to the evolution of social expenditure in different national contexts? What new initiatives are on the horizon? Who supports them and why?

Socially-sensitive adjustment programmes. For a number of years, attempts have been made to implement macro-economic reform while still protecting basic social spending. How are such initiatives proceeding? What trade-offs arise when they are implemented? How is the experience reflected in attempts to reorient the lending policies of multilateral financial institutions, so that a larger proportion of their portfolios is allocated to social spending?

Rethinking foreign development assistance. There is disenchantment among donors with foreign aid, which has declined in volume for a number of years. Foreign direct investment, in contrast, has grown exponentially in a handful of newly industrializing countries. What are the implications of these changes for social investment and social policy in different national settings? And do other shifts in donor policy—from project- to policy-based aid, and even in some cases to sectorially based specialization—have implications for financing social development? What might be accomplished by rethinking foreign aid entirely, with a view to creating a global system of entitlements?

The 20-20 initiative. In the context of evolving approaches to development assistance, this initiative deserves special attention. Through it, donors and recipients agree to work toward assigning 20 per cent of their resources to basic social services. To operationalize this commitment has not proved easy, in part because the data that would be required to verify it are often lacking. Donor co-ordination is also problematic. The experience raises important questions in the field of international social policy.

Fiscal reform and social sector restructuring
Channelling more resources toward social protection and social services depends in large measure on strengthening the fiscal capacity of national governments and granting high priority to social sector spending. Social services must also be managed as efficiently as possible. Therefore it is important to take up the following issues, among others.

Tax reform. The 1990s have seen many efforts to strengthen revenue-collecting mechanisms in developing countries. How influential has the international lending community been in determining the content of these reforms? Have they grown out of a serious local debate on alternatives, involving representatives of many different interests? Or have they simply been implemented by technocratic fiat? What institutional changes have been necessary to implement the new initiatives? Have these changes been effective in raising revenue? How is the fiscal burden now distributed among income groups? In a number of cases, new revenue seems likely to flow primarily from low- and middle-income families (through rising taxes on consumption) and not from the wealthy or from foreign investors.

National debates on social sector spending. During a period of continuing economic crisis in many countries, increasing needs must be met with declining resources. This lends special urgency to the debate on budgetary priorities. An overview of trends in budgetary allocations to social and other programmes, combined with an analysis of political debates, can be quite useful in highlighting the trade-offs confronted by governments and citizens.

The political economy of pension fund reform. The most remarkable element of pension fund reform in a number of countries is full or partial privatization. This move from publicly to privately managed pension schemes channels massive amounts of money into financial markets, which may or may not provide adequate returns on investment. In the meantime, state treasuries must meet the onerous costs of the transition. Although studies on pension fund reforms in various parts of the world have examined their administrative efficiency, investment strategies and assessment of risk, the social implications of privatizing pension funds, and the politics of the reform process itself, have been much less carefully analysed. UNRISD will promote discussion on this facet of the experiment.

Social sector restructuring in transitional settings. Financing social development is particularly problematic in countries undergoing radical political and economic transformation. The difficulty is not simply to find new modalities of funding, but to construct institutions that can provide social protection and services when earlier arrangements begin to crumble. Should the international development community rethink its policy advice to countries in transition? What alternatives are being put forward in the countries themselves to deal with the social crisis?

Using existing resources more efficiently
Finally, a great deal of effort has been invested in recent years in designing new ways of organizing and delivering social services, so that—even if levels of funding are stationary or declining—existing resources can be used more efficiently. Behind such initiatives there is often an anti-state bias, bred by disenchantment with faltering efforts on the part of national governments to deal effectively with declining levels of welfare. In some cases, governments (whatever their specific institutional and political characteristics) are simply assumed to be incapable of assuring a minimum level of welfare for their citizens. Thus it is considered necessary to look for alternatives in the business sector (through privatizing public services), the realm of not-for-profit associations (through giving NGOs primary responsibility for certain social services or activities), or via community organizations (through organizing people to provide for themselves).

UNRISD will examine a number of issues raised by these initiatives.

Privatization of public services. The economic rationale often given for privatization is the perceived need to reduce the cost to taxpayers of public social services and to ensure that groups with the capacity to pay are not "subsidized" with public funds. The political/ideological rationale is to reduce the role of the state. With great frequency, such strategies lower the quality of public education and public health—still provided to low-income groups—and widen the gap between those who can afford to pay for adequate attention and those who cannot. Nevertheless there are many variations on the theme of privatization, and some (like allowing citizens to choose among alternative service providers) often improve efficiency.

Decentralization of management. To an increasing extent, government funds for health, education or income support are managed at provincial or municipal levels. This may imply a special effort to involve citizens' groups in policy making and oversight activities, or it may not. The virtues and vices of decentralization have been much discussed. But decentralization is not a panacea. Its impact depends on the social and political setting in which it occurs, as well as on the institutional structures involved.

Targeting social benefits. "Welfare" payments and other forms of support provided to particularly disadvantaged groups are standard instruments of social policy in most countries. It is logical for scarce resources to be directed toward the neediest. But targeted payments can also stigmatize. They create a clientele of second-class citizens, who can be easily manipulated by those in power. Furthermore, in countries where the majority of the population is poor or destitute, such instruments are wholly insufficient. In these situations, means-tested programmes of support are simply unworkable. Does experience in a variety of different country settings suggest a need to rethink the concept of targeting?

Local self-help initiatives. Like targeting, approaches to social development that rely primarily on self-help efforts among relatively disadvantaged groups can be both useful and limited in their capacity to improve well-being. It is important to focus on new ways to mobilize local resources in low-income areas, as the micro-finance movement illustrates. There is scope for institution-building in areas like micro credit, as well as in local insurance and pension schemes. But these initiatives are likely to be most successful in a context of economic growth and expanding social rights. They cannot be full substitutes for redistributive public policy.


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