social policy
Policy Innovation toward Financial Inclusion: Colombian Government Links CCTs to Savings
Just days before the New America Foundation released its Global Assets Project policy brief, "Savings-Linked Conditional Cash Transfers: A New Approach to Global Poverty Reduction," the Colombian announces a major effort to do just that - link the beneficiaries of its nationwide CCT program with savings accounts. This major policy development in Colombia has emerged in part as a result of the efforts of the policy brief's co-author Yves Moury (Executive Director of Fundación Capital), and his project, Proyecto Capital. Our brief, released today, advocates using the (typically) massive CCT infrastructure to formally bank the largely unbanked poor populations in developing countries. But we also advocate going one step further: use the power of CCTs to encourage saving and asset accumulation of the poor.
Cash-22: Social Protection Not for the Unbanked?
Social policies around the world are shifting to account-based systems. Governments and corporations are using accounts to deliver a wider array of benefits. Between 1980 and 2004, the presence of defined contribution plans with public support increased from 10 to over 50 countries. But account strategies are also growing for the purposes of education, home ownership, health, and benefits directed at children.
Many of these account-based systems, however, are provided by employers and/or assume that persons have relationships with financial institutions, leaving out millions of low- and no-income people. This pattern is repeated in nearly every country.
Take, for example, the obviously frustrated account of Cape Town, South Africa resident who is desperately seeking to do right by her injured employee by helping him receive his unemployment benefits payments (from today's Cape Times, via Charles Klingman's awesome "unbanked listserv"):


