Publication year:
2024
English
Format:
PDF (1.8 MiB)
Publisher:
Save the Children International
This report and a series of case studies were conducted to gather evidence on which child-sensitive social protection (CSSP) programs in Malawi, Uganda, Somalia, and Zambia are most beneficial and cost-efficient in the long term. The analysis then examines measures these governments have taken to create more fiscal space for CSSP, describes opportunities to capitalise on the significant rates of return for scaling up these initiatives, and offers policy options for further financing these programs at scale. In addition to supporting the CSSP child rights agenda in East and Southern Africa, these findings may be useful for other countries seeking to understand public investment options for low- and middle-income countries.
This study contributes to the ongoing conversation around social protection spending and explores the value of investing in child-sensitive social protection (CSSP). It focuses on the potential to scale up and improve the child sensitivity of the SAGAL and CSSP Pilot programs. The study finds that for every additional $1 invested in SAGAL and the CSSP Pilot, $2.4 will be returned in the case of SAGAL and $2.1 for the CSSP Pilot, making the investments cost-effective. Investments in child-sensitive social protection could assist Somalia in capitalising on the demographic dividend from its youthful population.
Read full abstract
English
1 Documents
Publisher
Authors
Format
Content type
Country
Region
Rights
© Author/Publisher
Keywords
Share
Link