Targeting Social Protection: How to Reach Those in Need

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Targeting Social Protection: How to Reach Those in Need

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Use the following timestamps to navigate through the different sections of the video.

00:00 Welcome and opening remarks
04:46 Main findings of the report Revisiting Targeting in Social Assistance
18:10 Advantages and disadvantages of different targeting methods
22:36 Implementation and monitoring: The case of Senegal
29:58 Social registries: The case of Colombia
36:52 The role of technology, big data, and machine learning
44:12 Senegal: Including groups persistently displaced
50:52 Colombia: Including vulnerable groups
56:16 Targeting costs: moderate or manageable?
1:02:24 Legislation in Senegal mandating the use of social registries
1:08:34 The case of Colombia in dynamizing social registries
1:16:01 Closing remarks

  • Targeted social protection interventions can play a valuable role in helping achieve and deliver Universal Social Protection. Targeted programs and universal programs together support broader social policy.
  • Targeting is an effective tool used in social protection to make the most of constrained fiscal space. For a given budget, prioritizing poorer households can produce more progress on reducing poverty and inequality, smoothing income, and other dimensions of welfare such as human capital.
  • There is no single targeting method that fits every situation. Context and policy objectives drive choices. Whether to use methods such as self-targeting, geographic targeting, demographic targeting, or household welfare-based targeting methods must be based on context and capacities.
  • Regardless of the targeting method, robust social protection delivery systems can help: reduce transactions costs or stigma for beneficiaries, minimize inclusion errors, facilitate crisis response, improve access to social assistance, especially for the poorest and most vulnerable populations such as indigenous, migrants, people living with disability and others.
  • Advances in technology—ICT, big data, artificial intelligence, and machine learning—offer the promise of significant improvements in targeting accuracy but are not a panacea. Better data may matter more than greater sophistication in data use. Social protection targeting methods are changing as new data and technology as well as other innovations emerge.

Poll Results

Read the chat
Jing Guo

Rema Hanna, Jeffrey Cheah, Professor of South‐East Asia Studies and Chair of the International Development Area of the Harvard Kennedy School, kicks off the panel discussion by talking about the advantages and disadvantages of different targeting methods and why it is important to adjust targeting to contexts.
Thu, 03/31/2022 - 08:22
Jing Guo

Ousseynou Diop, Director of Single National Registry, General Delegation for Social Protection and National Solidarity in Senegal shares how Senegal’s social registry system is evolving to better serve social protection for both chronic poverty and adaptive social protection.
Thu, 03/31/2022 - 08:25
Jing Guo

Hello everyone, our apologies for a technical glitch in accessing the report. We are working on it now and the report will be available to you very soon.
Thu, 03/31/2022 - 08:29
Binod Koirala

Has the book also illustrated the targeting process and good practices post the covariate shock (as a part of SRSP)?
Thu, 03/31/2022 - 08:32
Jing Guo

Laura Pabón Alvarado, acting Deputy Director of Prospective and National Development, Colombia is discussing how her country’s adjustments from more basic to more sophisticated methods for estimating welfare have helped improve social protection outcomes.
Thu, 03/31/2022 - 08:33

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