Thursday, 1 April 2021

Kagwe roots for social protection to cushion economically vulnerable Kenyans

 


Kagwe roots for social protection to cushion economically vulnerable Kenyans


Kagwe roots for social protection to cushion economically vulnerable Kenyans
FILE - A woman walks on a street at the Mukuru Kwa Njenga slum in the capital Nairobi, Kenya, March 16, 2015. PHOTO | REUTERS

Health CS Mutahi Kagwe has underscored the role of social protection programmes’ to ease economic challenges associated with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Also ReadGBV survivors and those at risk should be considered when setting up policies for social protection

Kagwe noted that well thought out social protection programmes will act as safeguards for the economically vulnerable.

“Social protection is an effective way to protect immediate human needs and to cushion economic reversals by protecting productive assets,” he said. “If governments have channels in place that they can use to put income into people’s hands when they lose their livelihoods, they can forestall losses that might set economic recovery back years.”

He was speaking at the 23rd African Economic Research Consortium (AERC) Virtual Senior Policy Seminar on Wednesday.

Also Read: Third of world’s people get no gov’t aid during COVID-19 pandemic: Oxfam

The seminar, which featured delegates from across the continent, including Central Bank Governors, Finance and Economic Affairs Ministers among other stakeholders, was hosted under the theme The Global COVID-19 Health Pandemic and Its Implications for the African Economies.

In his speech, CS Kagwe noted that with new infections on the rise, it is a race against time for governments to re-look at some policy interventions necessary to provide appropriate coping and recovery mechanisms to respond to the crisis.

Social protection initiatives, he said, support positive health outcomes by mitigating economic shocks, such as income losses resulting from the measures governments have imposed to contain the spread of COVID-19.

CS Kagwe advised economic policy stakeholders to consider adopting social protection measures such as the Kazi Mtaani initiative.

“The objective is to avoid panic sales of productive assets, ensure households keep a roof over their heads, help small businesses to pay wages of furloughed staff, and to provide public works employment while the informal sector is paralysed,” he said.

Also ReadThe unspoken inequality of the COVID-19 pandemic

Other speakers at the seminar included AERC Executive Director Professor Njuguna Ndung’u, and Dr Arqebe Oqubay, Senior Minister and Advisor to the Prime Minister of Ethiopia.

At the seminar, Equity Bank (Kenya) Board Chairman Amb. Erastus Mwencha, who is also the former Vice-Chair of the African Union, served as the Chair of a Special Session honouring the first AERC Executive Director and former Governor of the Tanzania Central Bank, Prof. Bennu Ndulu, who passed on last month (February).

The COVID-19 pandemic has struck business ecosystems, affected livelihoods and threatens to overturn sub-Saharan Africa’s development progress and growth projections.

It has brought to the fore economic challenges and exposed many institutions’ frailty across the continent.

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