National Consultation on Readiness to Implement Action Plan to Strengthen Regional Cooperation on Social Protection: Nepal
10 September 2024, 09:00 - 15:30 Nepal Time Time | By invitation only
Radisson Hotel , Kathmandu, Nepal
Governments have increasingly recognized social protection as a key policy instrument to build a more productive, protected and healthy population in Asia and the Pacific. In 2020, ESCAP member States endorsed the regional Action Plan to Strengthen Regional Cooperation on Social Protection (Action Plan), which serves as a shared vision, strategy and platform for promoting partnership and peer learning and identifying needs for capacity development. The Action Plan sets out 12 national actions that underpin the achievement of more inclusive and comprehensive social protection systems, ranging from upholding the right to social protection in legislative and regulatory frameworks, to ensuring a more effective design, coordination and delivery of social protection schemes.
To support member States in the implementation of the regional Action Plan, ESCAP has been mandated to facilitate peer learning as well as take stock of the readiness of countries to implement the Action Plan and achieve more inclusive and comprehensive social protection systems. Pilot stocktaking initiatives have been conducted in six countries across Asia and the Pacific (Cambodia, Georgia, Maldives, Mongolia, the Philippines and Türkiye) to share national experiences and pathways towards this vision and in 2024 ESCAP will expand this to Fiji, Nepal and Thailand.
Social protection systems are also confronted by an increasingly volatile riskscape in Asia and the Pacific. As they are being increasingly called on to deliver support during crises and shocks, there is a need to review new vulnerabilities that are emerging, and to explore how these can be protected by social protection schemes. With increasing attention towards adaptive and shock-responsive social protection systems, routine social protection systems are under pressure, and it is necessary to rethink how social protection can best support preparedness, early warning systems, post-crises rehabilitation as well as financing mechanisms to respond to climate change-related shocks and build climate resilience.
Social protection also plays an important role in building people’s resilience in the context of slow onset events, such as sea level rise, increasing temperatures, ocean acidification, glacial retreat and related impacts, salinization, land and forest degradation, loss of biodiversity, desertification.1 In the shift towards a carbon neutral economy, social protection can help smoothen people’s transition and facilitate mitigation and adaptation measures. In addition to climate risk-focused social protection measures, robust social protection floors will be needed to ensure people are resilient across the lifecycle.
Nepal faces several climate change-related hazards which have significant impacts on its environment, economy, and society. It was the 10th most affected country from 2000 to 2019 on the long-term Global Climate Risk Index, reflecting that the country was highly impacted by extreme weather events and was highly vulnerable to climate risks. Climate policies in Nepal are beginning to address some interlinkages with social protection in their action plan. Several of the actions are social protection measures, but some provisions such as the provision of cooperatives or saving and credit groups are not strictly social protection actions. However, they feature broad risk management measures which can help in risk pooling and risk sharing and thus support in managing the risks. Therefore, there is need to systematically integrate social protection and poverty reduction considerations in climate policies, measures and strategies, including NDCs, and NAPs. Similarly, integration of climate change considerations into social protection policies, strategies and programmes as well as action plans is also necessary. This could include programme (re)design, for example to better link social assistance and re-skilling, for an adaptive and scalable system – bringing social assistance, social insurance and active labour market interventions together.
It is important to consider these emerging issues within the social protection framework in Nepal, and thus ESCAP, jointly with the National Planning Commission and in close collaboration with the RCO, will prepare a report to address these emerging issues, as well as the overall situation of social protection. A national consultation will be conducted with stakeholders from relevant ministries and stakeholders to discuss and review the findings of the report and agree on proposed recommendations.
Day 1 of the consultation will serve as a national dialogue on climate change and social protection, bringing together stakeholders from both climate change and social protection sectors, to identify entry points to strengthen their coordination. The first half of Day 2 will review the overall findings of the report and recommendations through groupwork and discussion. The afternoon of Day 2 will be a workshop to introduce the SPOT Simulator to build understanding on the impact that benefit parameters can have on poverty, consumption, inequality and their costs. The SPOT Simulator is an online microsimulation model that draws on national household income and expenditure surveys to project economic outcomes of investing in child benefits, disability benefits, maternity benefits and old age benefits.
Upcoming Events
Previous Events
Accelerating Implementation of the Action Plan to Strengthen Regional Cooperation on Social Protection
Meeting Room H, United Nations Conference Centre, Bangkok, Thailand
-
National Consultation on Readiness to Implement Action Plan to Strengthen Regional Cooperation on Social Protection: Nepal
Radisson Hotel , Kathmandu, Nepal
-