A social protection floor for everyone: a universal rights-based development goal

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27 January 2014 Well into the 21 st century, the world remains an unfair, unequal, insecure and unhealthy place for the majority of people. At global level, four out of five persons do not have access to comprehensive social protection. About 80 per cent of the global population live in social insecurity and face a complete loss of income security when a personal or national economic crisis strikes. About half of our insecure population live in abject absolute poverty, the cruellest form of insecurity. Increasing levels of the feminization of poverty are recorded. About 30 per cent of the global population have no access to adequate health care. Every second child is poor and millions of children die every year of preventable causes. Millions of older persons face poverty, hardship and disease at the end. Inequality is increasing in many parts of the world. Social progress is uneven, unacceptably modest and slow. The state of global social realities is not inevitable and can be changed by decisive action. We, the Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors, a coalition of more than 70 civil society and trade union organizations, promote social protection floors as key instruments to achieve the overarching social goal of the global development agenda. Social protection is one of the foundations for inclusive, equitable and sustainable development. It can simultaneously address the economic, social and environmental dimensions of sustainability and preservation of livelihoods. It can have a transformative role in contributing to long-term inclusive and sustainable growth while also enhancing resilience against natural and manmade disasters, as well as economic and social crises. We subscribe to the fundamental goal of social justice upheld in the ILO Constitution and the Declaration of Philadelphia 1 and its essential cornerstones as defined in Articles 22 to 26 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. We want the human right to social security 2, defined at least as guaranteed basic income security and access to essential health care, to be realized by 2030 the next target date for the global development agenda. The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has elaborated the right s normative content as well as the core obligations of States parties in respect of the right 3. 1 ILO Constitution (1919 et seq.) and Annex, Declaration of Philadelphia, 1944. 2 As formulated in Articles 22 and 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948 and Article 9 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, 1966. 3 General comment 19 : To ensure access to a social security scheme that provides a minimum essential level of benefits to all individuals and families that will enable them to acquire at least essential health care, basic shelter and housing, water and sanitation, foodstuffs, and the most basic forms of education (GC 19, Art. 59a). Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors Page 1

The target date of 2030 is more than 80 years after the right to social security was first formulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. There is already long experience with social protection systems that work, but largely in more developed countries. Now, recent encouraging experience in less developed countries demonstrates that without doubt some form of social protection is affordable and feasible nearly everywhere 4. We believe that as this world becomes significantly richer, no woman, no man and no child need live in social insecurity, poverty and apprehension. We believe that the International Labour Organization s Social Protection Floors Recommendation No. 202 (2012), which emerged from the joint Global Social Protection Floor Initiative of the UN System, is a cornerstone to meet the objective to ensure security, to remove the fear of destitution, and to protect standards of living when people are sick, unemployed, disabled and old, or cannot work when having to care for infants or sick family members. It can help address inequality and discrimination that women experience in accessing basic social services, economic opportunities and resources. For men and women to benefit equally from social protection systems, the role of women as caregivers must be explicitly addressed by social protection programmes, as must be the differences in access to services, work, and productive activities between women and men. The Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors holds that the social protection floor concept developed by the UN Social Protection Floor Initiative, described in the Bachelet report 5 and defined in the ILO Recommendation No. 202 must comprise the core social objective of the post-2015 global development agenda. National floors of social protection The ILO Recommendation No.202 concerning National Floors for Social Protection 6 is an instrument of international public law that all member States of the ILO must take into account when drafting national social legislation. It establishes core content for the Human Right to Social Security as expressed in Article 22 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948. The Recommendation provides that national social protection floors should comprise basic social security guarantees for: access to a set of goods and services, constituting essential health care, including maternity care, that meets the criteria of availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality; basic income security for children, at least at a nationally defined minimum level, providing access to nutrition, education, care and any other necessary goods and services; 4 Already, implementation of nationally designed social protection floors is a key driver of the social development agenda, especially the Copenhagen Declaration and Platform for Action and its goals of poverty eradication, social inclusion and full employment and decent work. 5 In April 2009, the UN Chief Executives Board on Programmes selected the topic of Social Protection Floors (SPF) as one of its nine key priorities to cope with the global crisis, its consequences and the evident necessity for adequate social protection systems. The initiative was to be co-led by ILO and WHO. In October 2011, the high-level advisory board of the Social Protection Floor Initiative, a coalition of UN agencies, bilateral donors and NGOs chaired by Michelle Bachelet (then former President of Chile and former Executive Director of UN Women) presented a report to the UN Secretary General that demands a social protection floor for all and demonstrates its feasibility. ILO: Social Protection Floor: for a fair and inclusive Globalisation, report of the advisory group chaired by Michelle Bachelet, Geneva 2011. 6 International Labour Office (ILO 2012): Social Security for all Building social protection floors and comprehensive social security systems, Geneva, 2012 (see text of the recommendation on p. 33). Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors Page 2

basic income security, at least at a nationally defined minimum level, for persons in active age who are unable to earn sufficient income, in particular in cases of sickness, unemployment, maternity and disability; and basic income security, at least at a nationally defined minimum level, for older persons. The Recommendation emphasizes that Social Protection Floors are not a static objective. States are expected to embed them in strategies to extend social security that progressively ensure higher levels of social security to as many people as possible, and for that purpose States must progressively build and maintain comprehensive and adequate social security systems. Floors of protection are a first necessary step towards universal, rights based and comprehensive social protection for all. In no manner can social protection floors be conceptualized as - or serve as - ceilings to cap access to social security. They must be part of wider and coherent national social protection development strategies. The Recommendation advances 18 human rights principles that should govern national social protection systems, inter alia universality, non-discrimination, and social inclusion. Among them also is the principle that high quality public services enhance the delivery of social security systems and that essential stakeholders in societies should participate in the design and implementation of national social protection systems. Finally, the Recommendation acknowledges explicitly that access to essential health care and income security are interrelated objectives that should not and cannot be pursued in isolation without losing effectiveness and efficiency; and enjoins States to engage in a wide national participative process in giving effect to the Recommendation. In line with major UN Treaties on human rights, the Recommendation offers strong normative guidance, recognizing that the State has overall and primary responsibility in giving effect to the Recommendation. Accordingly, the State in dialogue with societies determines the legal and regulatory framework, the means and methods of implementation, the level of social protection, and the nature of access (direct services and/or income support services for effective access). Social protection floors and their role in economic development, combating poverty and reducing inequality The Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors recognizes that social protection can be instrumental in preventing poverty and correcting its consequences at all levels of income. It can also be instrumental in addressing some of the systemic root causes of poverty, but cannot do so in isolation 7. As Recommendation No. 202 sets out, social protection must be embedded into the broad matrix of economic and social policies to be effective and procure the greatest benefit. The potential of social protection to improve the lives of people will be fully achievable only when linked to people-centred labour markets, fair economic policies 7 Social protection floors cannot be a substitute for economic development. They cannot serve as a sole tool to alter the root causes of structural poverty. Moreover, social protection floors cannot be used as an alibi to cease efforts to improve livelihoods, ensure decent work for all, and raise the standard of living for all. Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors Page 3

and environmental policies that lower the level of individual risk 8 and reduce threats to the well-being and participation of all people. Well-designed social protection floors will reduce inequalities and proactively enhance gender equality because social protection guarantees have multiple and interconnected beneficial effects which can cause a virtuous circle. Better education leads to better work life; access to health care, nutrition, water and sanitation maintains people in good health, and leads to more sustained employment; access to housing fosters stability, civic participation and access to the social service system; assistance for women when childbearing enhances their prospects for fulltime work and a more consistent work history; lowered unemployment of youth leads to better lifelong work prospects and so on. All these benefits have been demonstrated and are of paramount importance for human development. Well-designed social protection floors serve as economic and social stabilizers in times of crisis and should never be compromised in times of fiscal crisis 9. The Coalition does not envisage a future in which some persons benefit from economic globalization and social protection floors are used to compensate those who do not. Social protection floors are conceived as an investment in people that can address inequalities of opportunity through transfers in cash or in kind. Social protection floors cannot alter gross inequalities generated by skewed primary income distributions and the resulting unequal standards of living that exist in all societies to a lesser or greater extent. Most fundamentally, social protection floors can advance the right for all people to participate in the well-being and welfare of a society, to seize opportunity, and to contribute to the development of their society. The underlying concept of social protection floors invalidates any criticism levelled that it is founded on a principle of charity and encourages dependency. Persons excluded from a society cannot contribute to that society. Inclusion in society is the only means to the full enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms. Our goal: universal social protection floors The Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors holds that the two-dimensional strategy of the Recommendation, extending basic social security guarantees to all and ensuring improved quality of protection be adopted as a guide in developing an overarching social protection goal for social development in the framework of the post-2015 development agenda. To track progress in accordance with this strategy, the targets, target levels and indicators to monitor realization of the two objectives are outlined in the table annexed. The Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors promotes the right of all people residing in a country to social security, regardless of documentation. Accordingly, there is no reference 8 Risks of multiple sources (job loss; disease; crime; natural disasters; financial crises See World Development Report 2014; Washington; D.C. The World Bank, 2013) may be addressed by Social Protection Floors, but national policies should also be designed to lessen them. More, the World Bank states that provision of basic insurance against the risks associated with illness and old age is arguably a fundamental goal of social policy and supports examination of delinking social insurance from work status to cover workers in the informal economy, engaging public action inter alia to provide basic health care and old-age pensions funded by the state and directed to vulnerable populations but potentially open to everyone (at least for health care). 9 See also the letter dated 16 May 2012 addressed by the Chairperson of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights to States parties to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which states inter alia that austerity policies must identify the minimum core content of rights or a social protection floor, as developed by the International Labour Organization, and ensure the protection of this core content at all times. Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors Page 4

in this framework to the citizenship status of any person residing within the borders of a country or recognized territory. Annex Objective Targets Target levels in 2030 (1) All countries have 1. As many people 100 per cent adopted and as possible enjoy of all progressively the highest possible countries implement national level of social social protection protection development strategies Objective Targets Target levels Indicators (2) All people enjoy a floor of social protection 1. Health security for all: All people have access to essential healthcare goods and services defined as necessary at the national level 2. Income security for all: The concept of income security entails access to goods and services (inter alia, nutrition, housing, education and healthcare) defined as necessary at the national level that are guaranteed by the state either through direct provision or through provision of cash benefits that enable the purchase of necessary goods and services 100 per cent of residents in all countries 100 per cent of all residents in all countries Indicators 10 of progress (1) Number of countries with social protection development plans (2) Proportion (per cent) of the population with quality health services and goods needed for the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health 11 that are available, accessible, acceptable and affordable (3) Proportion (per cent) of the population with financial protection ensuring effective access to the health services and goods (4) Proportion (per cent) of resident children with access to basic income security (5) Proportion (per cent) of resident persons of active age with access to basic income security, notably in the event of sickness, unemployment or loss of livelihood, maternity, and disability (6) Proportion (per cent) of older resident persons with access to basic income security 10 All indicators of progress should be disaggregated where applicable by gender, age and income class 11 As set out in the WHO constitution of 1946 Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors Page 5

Signatories Name of Organization 1 ActionAid International 2 Advocacy etc. Consultancy and Training for NGOs 3 Asia Monitor Resource Centre and Global Network Asia 4 Asia-Europe People s Forum Secretariat for Asia 5 Association Points Cœur 6 B.I.R.S.A. Mines Monitoring Centre 7 Bangladesh Institute of Human Rights (BIHR) 8 Brot für die Welt 9 Cambodian Women Movement Organisation CWMO and Global Network Cambodia 10 Centro de Implementación de Políticas Públicas para la Equidad y el Crecimiento, (CIPPEC) 11 Community Law Centre 12 Community Legal Education Center CLEC and Global Network Cambodia 13 Concern Worldwide 14 Concern Worldwide UK 15 Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd 16 Congregation of the Mission 17 Daughters of Charity 18 Democracy and Workers Rights Centre DWRC and Global Network Arab Countries 19 Development Initiatives 20 Development Research and Training (DRT) 21 Dominican Leadership Conference 22 Drug Policy Programme 23 European Anti Poverty Network (EAPN) 24 European Association of Schools of Social Work (EASSW) 25 Franciscans International 26 Free Trade Union Development Center 27 Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung 28 Friends of The Disabled Association 29 Gambia Future Hands On Disable People 30 General Confederation of Trade Unions (GCTU) 31 Global Social Justice 32 Grow Up Free From Poverty Coalition 33 HelpAge International 34 Institute for International Women's Rights at The University of Winnipeg Global College, CANADA 35 Institute for Popular Democracy 36 Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary 37 International Alliance of Women (IAW) 38 International Association of Schools of Social Work (IASSW) 39 International Baby Food Action Network 40 International Council on Social Welfare (ICSW) 41 International Disability Alliance (IDA) 42 International Federation of Social Workers (IFSW) 43 International Kolping Society (IKS) 44 International Movement ATD Fourth World 45 International Network for the Prevention of Elder Abuse 46 International Presentation Association Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors Page 6

47 International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) 48 JusticeMakers Bangladesh 49 Labour and Economic Development Research Institute LEDRIZ and Global Network Zimbabwe 50 Labour and Education Foundation LEF and Global Network Pakistan 51 Labour Education and Research Network LEARN and Global Network Asia 52 Labour Research Service and Global Network Africa 53 Labour Resource and Research Institute LARRI Global Network Namibia 54 Lanka Net Org 55 Life of Dignity for All Campaign 56 Loretto Community 57 Make Mothers Matter (MMM) 58 Marianists International 59 Medical Mission Sisters 60 Modern University for Business and Science 61 National Council of Women USA 62 National Union of Bank Employees (NUBE) 63 National Union of Organizations on Intellectual Disability 64 Network for Transformative Social Protection, Asia 65 NGO Forum for Health 66 OXFAM 67 Passionists International 68 Phenix Center 69 Platform for Social Protection 70 Programa Laboral de Desarrollo PLADES and Global Network Latin America 71 Programme on Women s Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (PWESCR) 72 Proyecto de Derechos Econónimos, Sociales y Culturales (PRODESC) 73 Public Services International 74 Salesian Missions 75 Service and Research Institute on Family and Children (SERFAC) 76 Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur 77 Social Justice in Global Development 78 Solidar 79 South Asian Academy for Good Governance 80 The Grail 81 Trade Union Right Centre 82 Trickle Up 83 UK Child Poverty Action Group 84 UNANIMA International 85 VIVAT International 86 Workers Education Association Zambia WEAZ and Global Network Zambia 87 World Federalist Movement - Canada 88 Youth For Action 89 Soroptimist International 90 World Christian Life Community 91 Mothers Legacy Project Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors Page 7