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This paper seeks to explore the framework within which the International Labour Office should promote a principled, practical approach to social security policy in the new millennium. Integration has to be built around a joint coherent policy vision and building such a policy vision requires debate. This paper is a product of a joint effort of members of the ILO Social Security Department and social security specialists working in the ILO field offices.
Using a life-cycle approach, we identify key gaps for social reform in Georgia. The reduction of informal work is the most pressing of these, since formal employment is the backbone of any robust and reliable social insurance scheme. At the same time, greater financial resources are required through taxation in order to enable systematic social reform in Georgia. Both interventions are needed in order to fill the gaps in the current social protection system, which include the limited scope of pension and health insurance, as well as the lack of permanent unemployment insurance and universal child benefits.
Against the background of Germany’s long experience with social protection, we outline the main principles of the German welfare state and present the design of three main social insurance branches (pensions, health and unemployment). Based on the mixed experience that has emerged in Germany, in particular due to path dependencies and political deadlock, we derive lessons that inform a clear and coherent vision for social reform in Georgia.
Die fünf deutschen Sozialversicherungszweige sind traditionell beitragsfinanziert. Bereits heute erhalten sie aber teilweise erhebliche Steuerzuschüsse. Der Beitrag diskutiert für die einzelnen Sozialversicherungszweige Für und Wider einer Ausweitung der Steuerfinanzierung. Mit einer stärkeren Steuerfinanzierung käme das Budgetprinzip der Non-Affektation zum Tragen, das ein Abwägen zwischen unterschiedlichen, rivalisierenden Verwendungen etablieren würde. Dies stellt dann eine aufgabenadäquate Finanzierung dar, wenn eine interpersonelle Umverteilung oder die Finanzierung versicherungsfremder Leistungen primär bezweckt wird. Steht hingegen eine intrapersonelle Einkommensumschichtung im Lebenslauf im Vordergrund, so ist eine Beitragsfinanzierung zur Herstellung einer generellen Äquivalenz zwischen Beitragszahlungen und Leistungsansprüchen vorzuziehen. Auf dieser Grundlage wird ein Handlungsbedarf für den Bundeshaushalt mit Blick auf Renten- und Pflegeversicherung identifiziert. Mehrausgaben in diesen Bereichen werden als unvermeidbar und als auch im politischen Entscheidungsprozess durchsetzbar angesehen, da alternde Gesellschaften eine höhere Nachfrage nach diesen Leisungen aufweisen und entsprechende Haushaltsmittel einfordern werden.
Gefährdet die Nutzung von Gesundheits-Apps und Wearables die solidarische Krankenversicherung?
(2019)
Blutdruck messen, Schrittzahl verfolgen, Schlaf kontrollieren, Zuckerwerte im Blick haben und sogar die Durchführung von EKGs – dies sind nur einige der Anwendungen, die ein gängiges Mobiltelefon oder eine Smartwatch mit entsprechender Software durchführen können. Apps und Wearables (so werden am Körper getragene Computertechnologien genannt) werden in ihren Einsatzmöglichkeiten immer vielfältiger.
This paper documents the reversal of pension privatization and the reforms that took place in the 1990s and 2000s in Poland. The report analyses the political economy of different reform proposals, and the characteristics of the new pension system, including laws enacted, coverage, benefit adequacy, financing and contribution rates, governance and social security administration, social dialogue, positive impacts and other key issues of Poland’s pension system.
This policy brief investigates the costs of child poverty in the Balkans, including deprivation in terms of education, health, and social mobility. It then lays out the potential of social protection, most notably in terms of building resilence and fostering development. Set against recent case studies from around the world, including Cambodia and Uganda, the brief gives policy recommendations on various critical issues including transfer schemes, transformative measures, and (alternative) care for children with disabilities.
This policy brief is part of a wider research project entitled ‘Building the Economic Case for Investments in Social Protection’. The research aims at demonstrating the potential impacts of social protection on inclusive growth. The project is a collaborative effort between the Maastricht Graduate School of Governance at the University of Maastricht and United Nations University-MERIT, NL; the Global Development Institute at the University of Manchester, UK; the School of Social Science at the University of Makerere, Uganda; and the Expanding Social Protection Programme of the Ugandan Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development. This project is part of the research agenda of the Knowledge Platform Inclusive Development Policies and funded by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands through the NWO-WOTRO programme.
This policy brief is part of a wider research project entitled ‘Building the Economic Case for Investments in Social Protection’. The research aims at demonstrating the potential impacts of social protection on inclusive growth. The project is a collaborative effort between the Maastricht Graduate School of Governance at the University of Maastricht and United Nations University-MERIT, NL; the Global Development Institute at the University of Manchester, UK; the School of Social Science at the University of Makerere, Uganda; and the Expanding Social Protection Programme of the Ugandan Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development. This project is part of the research agenda of the Knowledge Platform Inclusive Development Policies and funded by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands through the NWO-WOTRO programme.
This study aims to highlight the significance of social protection as an autonomous strategy for migration policies and research. It focuses particularly on the German strategies for combating the causes of flight and migration. By managing migration flows, stabilizing societies and encouraging economic development, social protection can play an important role in reducing migration flows. At the same time, social protection can act as a stabilizer in the countries of origin and accelerate economic growth as well as supporting individual decisions to return to the countries of origin.
The Participation Act, introduced in the Netherlands in 2015, puts into practice the idea that every individual has to make a contribution in a participatory society. The Act includes aspects of income support, compulsory activities in return for benefits, and labour market reintegration. Drawing on 45 interviews, we provide insights into interactions between the individual financial and social situation, an individual’s position in society, and reintegration activities. The narratives show the fundamental need for individual freedom and societal meaning, recognition, and appreciation, as well as the complex circumstances in which social assistance recipients make decisions. Conflicts between those needs and the Act lead to the question of how personal and societal objectives can be reconciled.