social protection in the face of climate change: targeting principles and financing mechanisms
TRANSCRIPT
Social Protection in the Face of Climate Change:Targeting Principles and Financing Mechanisms
Michael R Carter & Sarah Janzen
University of California, Davis, I4 Index Insurance Innovation Initiative & NBERMontana State University
June 2015
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Summary
Shocks are a recognized driver of povertyClimate change, which increases the frequency & intensity ofclimate shocks, threatens to make shocks an ever moreimportant part of the poverty dynamicsAgainst this backdrop, we ask two questions:
1 How should social protection in the face of climate change betargeted or prioritized between the already destitute and thosewho are vulnerable to becoming destitute?
2 Can public budget constraints be relaxed–and impacts onpoverty increased–by having social protection targeted at thevulnerable financed in part by the private social protectioninsurance ’premium’ contributions by its beneficiaries?
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Summary
To gain purchase on these questions, we develop a theoreticalmodel of risk, accumulation and insurance inspired by pastoralregions of East Africa where climate shocks drive povertyPreliminary findings from the theoretical analysis are:
Targeting social protection dollars to the vulnerable reducesboth the extent and depth of poverty relative to a conventionalcash transfer strategy that targets only the destitute;Given a budget constraint, targeting the vulnerable induces atradeoff between the short-term and the long-term well-beingof the poor;Can mitigate this tradeoff if the public budget is stretched byhaving the vulnerable fund a portion of the premium load foran insurance that functions as contingent social protection;Limited ability of the vulnerable to self-finance their own socialprotection as their demand for insurance is highly price elasticClimate change-induced increases in risk ... [still need to finishthis part!]
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Outline for Today
1 A Dynamic Model of Risk, Vulnerability & Long-term PovertyDynamics
Core insights from a model with fixed humancapital/capabilitiesEndogenous human capital formation & the inter-generationaltransmission of poverty
2 Social Protection Tradeoffs: Targeting the Destitute or theVulnerable?
Standard social protection via means-tested CCT targeted atthe destituteInter-temporal poverty tradeoffs if prioritize contingenttransfers to the vulnerable over a CCT
3 Reducing Tradeoffs with Partially Self-financed InsuranceImplementing vulnerability-targeted social protection via indexinsuranceBudget-stretching through beneficiary co-finance of VSPLimitations of co-finance
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Dynamic Model of Consumption & Accumulation in theFace of Risk
Consider an infinitely lived household dynasty d , which iscomprised of a sequence of generations g = 1,2, ... & eachgeneration lasts for 25 years (t = 1...25).Enjoys initial endowments of physical assets (Ad0) and humancapital (Hd0)
Assets and human capital combine to produce income usingeither a low or high (fixed cost) technologyAssets are subject to random depreciation (mortality) shocksConsumption cannot be more than cash on hand (value ofincome plus assets) as no borrowing is assumed possibleInitially assume human capital fixed across generations at Hdo
Will then allow human capital to be updated for each newgeneration, where updating sensitive to ’childhood’ nutrition inthe prior generation
Mathematically:
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Dynamic Model of Consumption & Accumulation in theFace of Risk
maxc−→dgt
Eθ
[∞
∑g=1
25
∑t=1
u(cdgt)
]subject to :
cdgt ≤ Adgt + f (Adgt ,Hdgt)
f (Adgt ,Hdgt) = Hdgtmax[Aγh
dgt −F ,Aγ l
dgt ]
Adgt+1 =[f (Adgt ,Hdgt)+(1−θdgt+1)Adgt
]− cdgt
Hdgt+1 = Hd0
Adgt ≥ 0
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Dynamic Model (fixed human capital)
Model admits 2 possible long-run equilibria:For each initial endowment pair (Hd0,Ad0), there is someprobability that the dynasty will end up in ’chronic poverty’ atthe low equilibriumFixing Hdo at an intermediate level, simulation of the dynamicmodel reveals the following:
Micawber threshold AM = 14Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Chronic Poverty Map (fixed human capital)
Across full endowment space see the following:
For fixed human capital, partitions space into: Always poor(Hd0 < 1.05); Never poor (Hd0 > 1.35); and, Multipleequilibrium potentially poor in betweenAt any point in time, define the Vulnerable as those in themulti-color band & AM(H) as the ’Micawber Frontier’
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Dynamic Model (fixed human capital)
Model has three key implications:
Shocks Can Have Irreversible Consequences for the VulnerableA shock that pushes a household below its critical asset level,AM(Hdgt), has irreversible consequences as the householdbecomes mired in chronic poverty.Shocks Can Induce Asset Smoothing by the VulnerableWhile households near either steady state will smoothconsumption, highly vulnerable households in theneighborhood of AM(Hdgt) will asset smooth when hit with ashock (cut consumption to preserve capital and avoid collapseinto chronic poverty).
While asset smoothing is understandable, it potentially hasdeleterious long-term consequences as consumption doubles asinvestment into future human capital.
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Nutritionally Sensitive Inter-generational Transmission ofHuman Capital
Know that the ’First 1000 Days’ matter for human potentialEvidence that the poor households smooth by cuttingnutritional and educational investments (e.g., Hoddinott &Kinsey, 2003, Hoddinott, 2006 & Jacoby et al. 1997).
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Nutritionally Sensitive Inter-generational Transmission ofHuman Capital
Consider following equation of motion for human capital:
The first term is curly brackets is the next generation’s geneticpotential expressed as a weighted average of the parentgeneration’s human capital endowment and a random draw,H̃, from the overall population capabilities distribution(E[H̃]= 1.35 in simulations)
The second term in curly brackets is a penalty that pushes anindividual below their genetic potential if they sufferedconsumption shortfalls (cdgt < z) in the first critical five yearsof life.
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Chronic Poverty Map (endogenous human capital)
Again simulate the dynamic model (assuming myopia), butthis time allowing human capital to evolve
(a) Fixed Human Capital (b) Endogenous Human Capital
Micawber Frontier has moved to the northeast. Initialendowment positions in the lower right of the diagram, whichused to have some probability of escape from long-termpoverty have seen those prospects drop to zero.
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Chronic Poverty Map (endogenous human capital)
Moreover, vulnerability has increased for a broad range ofdynasties that used to be able to rely on rapid accumulationand asset smoothing to insure a near certain escape frompoverty.Get further insight into process by looking how human capitalevolves across generations:
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Poverty Dynamics under a Conventional Cash TransferSocial Protection Policy
The inability of poor households to sustain investment in thehuman capital of their children has motivated the outpouringof ’save the children’ CCTs we now see across the worldWe begin by considering a stylized social protection programthat offers cash transfers τdgt with the followingcharacteristics:
Means Tested: Eligible households are those for whomcdgt < z , where z is the consumption poverty line.Contingent Transfers: Subject to budget constraints, eachhousehold receives the transfer needed to completely close thepoverty gap–i.e., τdgt = z− cdgt .Government Budget Constraint: Government has a fixed socialprotection budget, B, that is initially just large enough to closethe poverty gap for all destitute households. If budget becomesinsufficient, then transfers are adjusted so that all destitutedynasties receive transfers that close an equal fraction of theirpoverty gap.
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Poverty Dynamics under a Conventional Cash TransferSocial Protection Policy
Mathematically, define the total social protection need at eachpoint in time as:
B̃gt =D
∑d=1
(z− cdgt)1(z > cdgt)
and define the available budget adequacy as:
λgt =B
B̃gt
.
Individual transfers are thus given by:
τdgt=
z− cdgt if λgt ≥ 1λgt(z− cdgt), otherwise
.
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Poverty Dynamics under a Conventional Cash TransferSocial Protection Policy
To explore the effectiveness of the CCT, we use our dynamicmodel to simulate an economy comprised of D dynasties thatare initially spread uniformly across the physical/human capitalendowment spaceAssume CCTs are ’unanticipated’ in sense ofBarret-Carter-IkegamiWe can then see how the CCT influences the chronic povertymap and also gauge its effectiveness via headcount andpoverty gap measures defined as follows:
Hgt =D
∑d=1
1(z > cdgt)
D
Ggt =1
DHgt
D
∑d=1
(z− cdgt)1(z > ccgt)
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Chronic Poverty Map under a Budget-constrained CCT
(c) Endogenous Human Capital (d) Endogenous HK with CCT
Cash transfers have some impact on poverty dynamics as thearea of certain chronic poverty in the southeast corner of themap shrinks modestly.Vulnerability, however, remains high in certain portions of theendowment space.
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Poverty Dynamics under a Budget-constrained CCTMeasures based on realized post-transfer consumption
(e) Poverty Headcount (f) Average Depth of Poverty
As can be seen, cash transfers initially cut into the extent anddepth of poverty.Over time, the poverty headcount measure drifts upwards asshocks slowly increase the number of destitute dynastiesGiven the fixed budget, this increase in the number of cashtransfer-eligible households in turn pushes up the averagedepth of povertyCarter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Poverty Dynamics under a Budget-constrained CCTMeasures based on potential earnings
(g) Poverty Headcount (h) Average Depth of Poverty
These measures are based on expected income (based onassets)More stable, but draw out that cash transfers have limitedimpact on potential (except via human capital circuit)
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Vulnerability-targeted Contingent Social Protection (VSP)
The pernicious effects of the underlying system dynamicsraises the question as to whether there can be a more effectivedeployment of the given social protection budgetConsider a VSP scheme as one which:
Vulnerability TargetedIssues payments to the “moderately vulnerable” (non-poor20-80% chance of collapse into destitution) anytime they arehit by a shock that could push them into chronic poverty (notethat these are contingent payments)TriageSocial protection resources are triaged by first making transfersto the vulnerable who have been hit by shocks, and thentransferring the residual social protection budget to the alreadydestitute.
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Vulnerability-targeted Contingent Social Protection(preliminary results)
Preliminary resultsTradeoffs in depth of poverty visible in poverty measures aboveAlso see (small) favorable shift in chronic poverty map
(i) Endogenous HK with CCT (j) Triage Remakes Poverty MapCarter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Using Insurance Mechanisms to Reduce Targeting Tradeoff
In principal, contingent social protection is essentially a socialinsurance contract that pays off in moments of needAs already seen, such insurance can break the descent intopoverty for the vulnerableGiven these large private gains from contingent socialprotection, and the tradeoff implied for the poverty gap whenbudget is redirected from a CCT to a VSP, might it be possiblefor the vulnerable to pay for their own social protectionTo explore the willingness of the vulnerable to pay for thisprotection, we explore the pattern of demand for an indexinsurance contract set up to mimic a CSPIn particular, will explore an implementable index insurancecontract that pays off any time a covariant shock occurs(idiosyncratic shocks do not trigger payments, exposing thevulnerable to ’basis risk’)
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
VSP as Insurance
Drawing on Janzen, Carter and Ikegami (2015), we explore thewillingness of the vulnerable to purchase insurance
Despite potential gains from contingent payments, thevulnerable’s willingness to purchase insurance at market pricesis modest, but price elasticity is highPattern reflects extremely high shadow price of liquidity of thevulnerable (See Janzen et al. for further details):
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Evaluation of Cash Transfer & Subsidized Insurance SocialProtection Scheme
Taking the same budget constraint, government first spendsmoney offering a 50% insurance subsidy to anyone with lessthan 35 units of assetsResidual budget spent on cash transfers as before
(k) CCT (l) Subsidized Insurance
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Evaluation of Cash Transfer & Subsidized Insurance SocialProtection Scheme
Can also look at poverty measures:
(m) Poverty Headcount (n) Average Depth of Poverty
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Further Insights into Efficacy of Alternative Schemes
Insurance subsidy leads to more even draw on budgetCheaper too (but note have targeting differences)Finally, see growth impacts of insurance (asset transfers areunanticipated, however)
(o) Budget Remaining for CashTransfers
(p) Growth Effects on GDP
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Shocks and Climate Change
Currently assume the following baseline distribution ofcovariant risk
Currently are increasing likelihood and skewness of shocks togain insight into what happens under stylized climate changescenarios
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change
Conclusion
Weather & other shocks may be an important driver of povertyCoping strategies of the vulnerable are partially effective in theshort-term, but may fail in the longer-term as theconsequences of reduced nutrition are transmitted through tothe next generationLogic of contingent social protection for the vulnerable is clear:
Prevent the growth of the number of destitute (which crowdsthe social protection budget & increases the poverty gap)Reduce the inter-generational transmission of poverty causedby asset smoothing
Insurance can in principal serve at least a partially self-financedform of social protection for the vulnerableNeed to still flesh out the sensitivity of optimal policy to riskenvironmentThere are also challenges to making insurance work, but thatis a topic that merits its own discussion
Carter & Janzen Social Protection & Climate Change