How Can Safety Nets Contribute to Economic Growth?

The paper provides an up-to date and selective review of the literature on how social safety nets contribute to growth. The evidence is carefully chosen to show how safety nets have the potential to overcome constraints on growth linked to market failures, and is organized into four distinct pathway...

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Veröffentlicht in:The World Bank economic review 2014-01, Vol.28 (1), p.1-20
Hauptverfasser: Alderman, Harold, Yemtsov, Ruslan
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description The paper provides an up-to date and selective review of the literature on how social safety nets contribute to growth. The evidence is carefully chosen to show how safety nets have the potential to overcome constraints on growth linked to market failures, and is organized into four distinct pathways: i) encouraging asset accumulation by changing incentives and by addressing imperfections in financial markets caused by constraints in obtaining credit, and from information asymmetries; overcoming such failures helps households to invest into their human capital or productive assets; ii) failures in insurance markets especially in low income setting; safety nets are assisting in managing risk both ex post and ex ante; iii) safety nets are overcoming failure to create assets and other local economy complementary factors to household-level investments; iv) safety nets are shown to relax political constraints on policy. Safety nets have a dual objective of directly alleviating poverty through transfers to the poor and of triggering higher growth for the poor. However, the trade-off between the dual objectives of equity and growth is not eliminated by the potential for productive safety nets; this remains critical for designing social policies.
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source PAIS Index; Open Knowledge Repository; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects beneficiaries
cash transfer
Cash transfers
Conditional cash transfer programs
Credit insurance
Economic development
Economic growth
income
inequality
insurance
insurance market
international food policy
labor supply
Low income
Low income groups
market failure
political constraint
Poverty
productive assets
Productivity
public resource
public transfer
Public works
resource allocation
Risk management
safety net
Securities markets
social policies
Social policy
Studies
targeting
Working papers
World Bank
title How Can Safety Nets Contribute to Economic Growth?
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