Highlights of the 2014 Human Development Report
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Philippine Launch, 20 August 2014
#hdr2014hdr.undp.org
Sustaining Human Progress:
Reducing Vulnerabilities and Building Resilience
Human DevelopmentReport 2014
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• Post-2015: from getting to zero to staying at zero
• In our increasingly connected world we face – and must
manage - new vulnerabilities
• Human vulnerability: prospect of erosion of people’s
capabilities and choices.
• Vulnerability is often managed in silos. Human Development
theory is a holistic approach.
Why this Human Development Report?
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Human DevelopmentReport 2014
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Basic Propositions: The underlying drivers of vulnerability are –
• Low capabilities in health, education, income, personal security
• Inadequate policies and poor social & state institutions
Central Theses: Essential to –
• Enhance Choices, Protect Choices
• Set policies that aim at reducing vulnerability and building
resilience
Focus of the report
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From
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% of Households Reporting
Total costs (% of food spending)
Natural shocks 73.42 4.10
Economic shocks 67.46 1.26
Sociopolitical shocks 7.73 10.14
Health shocks 35.76 29.80
Shocks to households (PHL)
From: Capuno, Kraft, Quimbo, and Tan in Philippine Review of Economics Dec. 2013
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• Over 2.2 billion with overlapping deprivations in health,
education and living standards. Some 1.5 billion deprived in all
three.
• 80% of the globe lack comprehensive social protection. About
12% in chronic hunger.
• Nearly half of all workers—more than 1.5b—in
informal/precarious employment.
Who is Vulnerable and Why?
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Poverty
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Conflict
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Natural disasters
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• Embracing Universalism: Equal life chances require unequal
attention to the poor and disadvantaged.
• Putting People First: All policies need to reflect on their
impact on people’s lives.
Two Guiding Principles for Human Development
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• Life capabilities, sensitive periods
Threats face by individuals from infancy through youth,
adulthood and old age
• Structural vulnerabilities
e.g. The poor, minorities, women and the elderly
• Violence, personal insecurity
45 million displaced by violence or conflict
New Concepts, Old Realities
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Gaps Open Early and are Hard to Close
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Young People and Jobs
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• Universal access to basic social services enhances
resilience
• Universal or targeted spending?
When benefits are narrowly targeted the middle class are less
willing to fund them
• Imperative and feasible even at early stages of
development
• Addressing life cycle vulnerabilities - timing matters, so
resources should be available when most needed
Universal Basic Social Services
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Human Development Choices are
Affordable for All
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• Full employment - a central policy goal in the
1950s/60s - has fallen out of fashion. It must return.
• Jobs bring benefits far beyond a salary. They
foster social cohesion, bring dignity and belonging,
help individuals to manage shocks and volatility
Full Employment
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Get the Timing Right
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• Time to introduce social protection floors to
protect immediate choices and help
individuals make better long term decisions
during crises.
Social Protection
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• Social inclusion builds resilience and by transforming norms
helps address violent conflict.
• Take direct measures to address group inequalities, such
as affirmative action, alongside broader pro-poor policies.
• Responsive institutions that give a voice to the poor - and
react to their concerns - can be hard to build but worth the
effort.
Social Inclusion, Responsive Institutions
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National action can only go so far; collective action is essential.
Two profound challenges for the 21C
• Under provisioning of global public goods, e.g. reducing
CO2 emissions
• Architectural deficits in global governance (which are
perhaps growing), e.g. financial governance
Inaction risks social instability whether from financial crises,
climate change, or mass unemployment.
An Interconnected World
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• Elements of a Global Social Contract.
• Renewed attention on fragile states and conflict.
• Greater fiscal space and less tax avoidance.
• Stronger global/regional shock absorbers e.g. Regional Monetary Funds.
Can Globalization Work for People?
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• A better balance between private and public interests.
• We need more than markets. Collective action and public
goods are essential.
• Sustaining progress takes work and requires protecting
achievements against vulnerability and building resilience.
Targeting vulnerable groups and reducing inequality are
essential.
Towards Inclusive, Resilient, Sustainable Progress?