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UNIVERZALIZATION OF SOCIAL PROTECTION IN HEALTH COVERAGE Daniel Titelman Chief, Development Studies Unit.

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Presentation on theme: "UNIVERZALIZATION OF SOCIAL PROTECTION IN HEALTH COVERAGE Daniel Titelman Chief, Development Studies Unit."— Presentation transcript:

1 UNIVERZALIZATION OF SOCIAL PROTECTION IN HEALTH COVERAGE Daniel Titelman Chief, Development Studies Unit

2  The Welfare State based on a “working society” has been an unmet promise.  Low coverage, which impacts social exclusion  Inequality in income distribution, which transfers over to social protection.  The reforms during the 1990s sought to improve financing and access through:  A stronger relationship between employment and protection, through the formalization of the labor market  Emphasis on incentive and efficiency mechanisms, more than on solidarity mechanisms HISTORICAL BACKGROUND AND REFORMS IN THE 1990s

3  The design of the reforms was not the most appropriate for the problems in the region.  Growth, which was low and volatile, was not favorable.  The dynamic of the labor market was not as expected:  High unemployment  Informality and precarization of work  Fiscal restrictions implied low, non- contributory coverage. CONTEXT OF THE REFORMS OF THE 1990s

4 IN SPITE OF THE REFORM, CONTRIBUTORY COVERAGE HAS NOT INCREASED SINCE 1990 COUNTRIES IN WHICH COVERAGE IMPROVED COUNTRIES IN WHICH COVERAGE WORSENED LATIN AMERICA: COVERAGE IN 1990 AND 2002 (% of employed that contribute)

5 Urban Rural Formal Urban Infor- mal Urban Men Women (% of working age) Q5 Q1 (rich) (poor) INEQUITY IN THE CONTRIBUTION STRUCTURE

6 SECTORAL DISTRIBUTION AND COMPOSITION OF SOCIAL SPENDING, BY INCOME STRATUM 16%16.3% 17.9% 29.1% 20.7%

7 IN SUMMARY On average,  4 out of 10 workers  4 out of 10 workers that are employed contribute to social security.  4 out of 10 people over age 70  4 out of 10 people over age 70 receive retirement or pension income.  4 out of 10 people  4 out of 10 people live in poverty conditions. There is great heterogeneity among the countries in the region.

8 SOCIAL PROTECTION: A CHANGE IN FOCUS  Work is not perceived as the exclusive mechanism for accessing social protection in the short and intermediate term.  Requires a better balance between incentives and solidarity.  New pressures due to demographic and epidemiological changes and changes in the family structure. A new social consensus is required in order to universalize social protection

9  Explicit, guaranteed and compulsory  Definition of financing levels and sources (solidarity mechanisms)  Development of social institutionality CONTENT OF A NEW SOCIAL PACT

10  Three dimensions of rights:  ethical  procedural  contents ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL RIGHTS IN PUBLIC POLICIES Advancing toward the construction of a true social citizenship

11 DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIAL INSTITUTIONALITY  Attributes of institutions that help to improve spending efficiency:  Continuity over time  Transparency and evaluation  Coordination within the public sector  Participation of civil society (local and national)  Geographic decentralization (with health care visits, institutions and training)  Regulation of private sector service providers

12 SOURCES OF FINANCING  The challenges of social protection require:  Increased non-contributory financing: increased collections and reallocation of spending  Increased contributory financing  A solidarity component without contributory financing.

13 PUBLIC SPENDING: GREAT DIVERSITY OF SITUATIONS Tributary income a/ Other income b/Capital income Contributions to soc. sec.LA: Trib. Inc. + Soc. Sec. LA: Total (20.8%) OECD Average (36.3%) Dom. Rep.

14 CHALLENGES TO SOCIAL PROTECTION IN HEALTH  Strong inequity in access to health services in the region

15 INEQUITY: OUT-OF-POCKET SPENDING ON HEALTH

16 CHALLENGES TO SOCIAL PROTECTION IN HEALTH  Strong inequity in access to health services in the region  Demographic, epidemiological and technological transition

17 INCIDENCE OF DISEASES DALYs per 1,000 inhabitants

18 CHALLENGES TO SOCIAL PROTECTION IN HEALTH  Strong inequity in access to health services in the region  Demographic, epidemiological and technological transition  Problems in the articulation of financing and service provision among sub- systems Advancing toward universalization

19 SEGMENTATION OF HEALTH SECTOR

20 DUALITY OF FINANCING SOURCES IMPOSES CHALLENGES ON SOCIAL PROTECTION IN HEALTH SYSTEMS  Overcome traditional segmentation between contributory social security and the non- contributory public system:  Gains in macro-efficiency due to better utilization of the available capacity.  Greater and better management of social risks.  Reduces incentives for “cream skimming.”  Strengthens solidarity mechanisms.

21 HEALTH: INTEGRATION OF THE PUBLIC AND SOCIAL SECURITY SUB-SYSTEMS  Universal Insurance by combining contributory and non-contributory sources.  Define benefits with universal coverage and guaranteed fulfillment (of health needs).  Rationalization of the use of the existing capacity.  Quality of the services is a fundamental incentive.  Purchasing and payment mechanisms.  Strengthen Primary Care.

22 IN SUMMARY  Universalizing and improving social protection is an unfinished task  Employment is not enough for universalizing coverage  Solidarity mechanisms should play a fundamental role, combined with improvements in the incentive systems  Reforms should integrate contributory and non-contributory schemes. Reforms in the context of a social consensus where rights are the normative horizon and economic restrictions are limitations to confront

23 UNIVERZALIZATION OF SOCIAL PROTECTION IN HEALTH COVERAGE Daniel Titelman Chief, Development Studies Unit


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