report
Making Pension Savings Easy and Efficient for Informal Sector Workers - Learning from Kenya’s Haba Haba Pilot
A new dawn for public employment services : Service delivery in the age of artificial intelligence
The Republic of Korea: Extending social insurance to digital platform workers
Modernising Access to Social Protection: Strategies, Technologies and Data Advances in OECD Countries
Playbook on Digital Social Protection Delivery Systems: Towards Dynamic Inclusion and Interoperability
Financing gap for universal social protection: Global, regional and national estimates and strategies for creating fiscal space
Scaling Up Social Assistance Where Data is Scarce - Opportunities and Limits of Novel Data and AI
worldbank.org (16.05.2024) During the recent Covid-19 shock (2020/21), most countries used cash transfers to protect the livelihoods of those affected by the pandemic or by restrictions on mobility or economic activities, including the poor and vulnerable. While a large majority of countries mobilized existing programs and/or administrative databases to expand support to new beneficiaries, countries without such programs or databases were severely limited in their capacity to respond.
EU: Study on poverty and income inequality in the context of the digital transformation
ceps.eu (13.05.2024) As European labour markets become increasingly digitalised, concerns about inequality and poverty are increasing. This study, completed for the European Commission, seeks to investigate these concerns further. Part A focuses on how prepared EU Member States are to manage the digital transformation in a socially fair manner. It develops 27 country fiches assessing the current and future prospects of each EU Member State.
Cash transfer, maternal and child health outcomes: a scoping review in sub-Saharan Africa
Cash Transfer (CT) programmes can improve maternal and child health outcomes in low- and middle-income countries. However, studies assessing the effectiveness of these programmes on maternal and child health outcomes (MCH), beyond nutritional outcomes and service utilisation, remain inconclusive. We synthesized current empirical evidence on the effectiveness of these programmes in improving MCH outcomes and suggested a framework for reporting such outcomes.