posted on 2024-09-05, 22:25authored byStephen Devereux, Rachel Sabates-Wheeler
Social protection describes all public and private initiatives that provide income or consumption transfers
to the poor, protect the vulnerable against livelihood risks, and enhance the social status and rights of the
marginalised; with the overall objective of reducing the economic and social vulnerability of poor,
vulnerable and marginalised groups. This paper argues against the popular perception of social protection
as “social welfare programmes for poor countries”, consisting of costly targeted transfers to economically
inactive or vulnerable groups. It also challenges the limited ambition of social protection policy in practice,
which has moved little from its origins in the “social safety nets” discourse of the 1980s, and aims to
provide “economic protection” against livelihood shocks, rather than “social protection” as broadly
defined here. Instead, we argue that social protection can be affordable; it should extend to all of the
population; it can contribute to the Millennium Development Goal of poverty reduction; and it can
empower marginalised people and be socially “transformative”.
History
Publisher
IDS
Citation
Devereux, S. & R. Sabates-Wheeler (2004) Transformative social protection. Working paper series, 232. Brighton: IDS.