INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance PROTECT AND INVEST in people Copyright © 2021 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / THE WORLD BANK Washington DC 20433 Telephone: +1-202-473-1000 Internet: www.worldbank.org This work is a product of the staff of The World Bank with external contributions. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this work do not necessarily reflect the views of The World Bank, its Board of Executive Directors, or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on the part of The World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. All dollar amounts are US dollars unless otherwise indicated. Rights and Permissions: The material in this work is subject to copyright. Because The World Bank encourages dissemination of its knowledge, this work may be reproduced, in whole or in part, for non-commercial purposes. Any queries on rights and licenses, including subsidiary rights, should be addressed to World Bank Publications, The World Bank Group, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2625; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. PROTECT AND INVEST in people ABSTRACT This Approach Paper considers the role of public finance to build, protect and utilize human capital as countries seek to recover from the COVID-19 crisis and lay a foundation for inclusive, resilient and sustainable development. The paper defines the problem in relation to human capital outcomes amid the COVID-19 crisis and outlines three areas for action: policy priorities, governance, and fiscal space for building and utilizing human capital. The paper highlights recent innovations and illustrates actionable steps for the short term as well as directions for the longer term, by country context, with the overarching objective of supporting a resilient recovery. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This paper is a joint product of the Equitable Growth, Finance and Institutions (EFI) and Human Development (HD) global practices at the World Bank. Ayhan Kose, Acting Vice President for Equitable Growth, Finance and Institutions, and Mamta Murthi, Vice President for Human Development, provided overall guidance. The team received further guidance from Marcello Estevao, Global Director for Macroeconomic Trade and Investment, and Edward Olowo-Okere, Global Director for Governance. Hana Brixi and Chiara Bronchi led a team of coauthors including Samer Al-Samarrai, Mary Breeding, Chadi Bou Habib, Zahid Hasnain, Igor Kheyfets, Christoph Kurowski, Tracey Lane, Yasuhiko Matsuda, Saw Young Min, Ceren Ozer, Adenike Sherifat Oyeyiola, Laura B. Rawlings, Michael Weber and Timothy Williamson. We are thankful for extensive comments provided by peer reviewers including Luis Benveniste, James A. Brumby, Tito Cordella, and William F. Maloney. Valuable contributions and comments were also received from: Anders Agerskov, James Anderson, Sameera Maziad Al Tuwaijri, Mary Frances Beaton, Kathleen Beegle, Tania Priscilla Begazo Gomez, Christian Bodewig, Anna Custers, Richard Damania, Amit Dar, Amanda Devercelli, Bill Dorotinsky, Leslie Elder, Pablo Fajnzylber, Isis Gaddis, Koen Martijn Geven, Marelize Gorgens, Pablo Gottret, Margaret Grosh, Caren Grown, Srinivas Gurazada, Daniel Halim, Elisabeth Huybens, Ogo-Oluwa Oluwatoyin Jagha, Bernard James Haven, Kelly Suzanne Johnson, Youngkyu Kang, Young Eun Kim, Stefan G. Koeberle, Eric Lacey, George Addo Larbi, Kate Mandeville; Massimo Mastruzzi, Carolina Monsalve, Samia Msadek, Andrew Myburgh, Philippe Neves, Tobias Pfutze, Miria Pigato, Shomikho Raha, Siddhartha Raja, Jun Rentschler, Hartwig Schafer, Siddharth Sharma, Meera Shekar, Lynne D. Sherburne-Benz, Elena Sterlin, Ajay Tandon, Margaret Triyana, Robert Utz, Hisham Ahmed Waly, Nuoya Wu, and Xiaoqing Yu. We thank Deepika Davidar and Franklyn Ayensu for editorial assistance, Junya Yuan and Israel David Melendez for graphic design, and Kavoori Lakshmi Diksha Ramesh for references review. CONTENTS ABBREVIATIONS ............................................................................................................................................. 05 FOREWORD .................................................................................................................................................. 06 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ................................................................................................................................ 08 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................................ 10 CHAPTER 1 Human Capital for Recovery and Resilient, Inclusive Development .............................................................. 11 1.1 The human capital impacts of the COVID-19 crisis ..................................................................................................... 12 1.2 The fiscal impacts of the COVID-19 crisis .................................................................................................................... 15 1.3 The role of public finance in human capital investments for recovery ................................................................. 17 CHAPTER 2 Public Spending to Build, Protect and Utilize Human Capital ...................................................................18 2.1 A human capital outcome-oriented framework for public expenditure ............................................................ 19 2.2 Restoring human capital .............................................................................................................................................. 21 Controlling the pandemic ........................................................................................................................................... 21 Regaining health ............................................................................................................................................................ 22 Bringing children back to school and recovering learning losses ............................................................... 22 Protecting young children and building a foundation for human capital development ......................... 23 Preventing scarring of jobseekers and supporting labor income ..................................................................24 2.3 Strengthening service delivery systems .................................................................................................................. 26 Harnessing technology for service delivery ......................................................................................................... 26 Strengthening health systems and preparedness ............................................................................................. 27 Building resilient education service delivery ........................................................................................................ 28 Strengthening social protection and labor market systems .............................................................................28 CHAPTER 3 Governance to Translate Fiscal Policies into Human Capital Outcomes .................................................... 30 3.1 Whole-of-government prioritization of human capital ........................................................................................ 31 3.2 Managing public finances for results ....................................................................................................................... 33 3.3 Results-oriented workforce management ............................................................................................................... 38 3.4 Transparency, Accountability, and Trust ................................................................................................................. 40 CHAPTER 4 Securing Resources for Human Capital Priorities ........................................................................................ 42 4.1 Protecting resources for human capital in times of crisis ................................................................................. 43 4.2 Mobilizing domestic resources with human capital lens ................................................................................... 45 4.3 Finding space within budgets.......................................................................................................................................48 4.4 Borrowing, debt management and international support for human capital priorities .............................. 50 4.5 Reducing the risk and impacts of future crises ..................................................................................................... 52 ABBREVIATIONS BISP Benazir Income Support Program CGE computable general equilibrium DSSI Debt Service Suspension Initiative DRM domestic resource mobilization ECD early-childhood development ESMAP Energy Sector Management Assistance Program ETR Environmental Tax Reform G&S Goods and Services GBV gender-based violence HCI Human Capital Index HICs high-income countries HIPC Heavily Indebted Poor Country INTOSAI International Organization of Supreme Audit Institutions LICs low-income countries LMICs lower-middle-income countries ICT-BPO Information and Communication Technology/Business Process Outsourcing ILO International Labor Organization INFF Integrated National Financing Framework MAMS Maquette for MDGs Simulation MICs middle-income countries MTFF medium-term fiscal framework MTDS medium-term debt management strategy MTEF medium-term expenditure framework MTRS medium-term revenue strategy NIS National Insurance Services NSDS nutrition-sensitive direct support OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development PAN Articulated Nutrition Budget Program PEMANDU Performance Management & Delivery Unit PFM public financial management PPP public-private partnership PRSP Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper RBF results-based financing Rs Mauritian rupee SAI supreme audit institution SDG Sustainable Development Goal SE social enterprise SUN Scaling Up Nutrition (movement) SWFs sovereign wealth funds TVET technical and vocational education and training UHCI Utilization-Adjusted Human Capital Index UMICs upper-middle-income countries UNFPA United Nations Population Fund UNIFEM United Nations Development Fund for Women WHO World Health Organization 05 PROTECT AND INVEST in people FOREWORD In less than a year, the COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted billions of lives and livelihoods. The pandemic may have erased more than 250 million jobs equivalent in 2020 and pushed 100 million people to extreme poverty. The world’s poorest have been facing surging food insecurity. Poverty reduction and shared prosperity have suffered their worst setback in decades. A decade of gains in human capital outcomes has been lost. The pandemic has caused disruptions in essential services with severe consequences for under-5 and maternal mortality, unwanted pregnancies, and undiagnosed and untreated noncommunicable diseases. The UN is estimating that there will be 130 million more malnourished children than it had projected before the crisis. Learning poverty, it is estimated, will rise by 10 percentage points to over 60 percent, and a generation of children stands to lose US$10 trillion in future lifetime earnings if there is less than full remediation. School closures have also contributed to the widening social and economic inequalities. Escalating gender-based violence, rising child marriage rates, and the burden of increased household care have placed the lives of many girls and women in ruin and narrowed their opportunities to pursue other life-fulfilling options. The impacts stand to derail progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The COVID-19 shock has also compounded the effects of climate change, which have been intensifying for some time, and thrown into sharp relief the delicate interdependence between people, the planet and the economy. The poor and vulnerable, who typically bear the brunt of natural disasters and violent conflict, have been hit especially hard. Against this sobering backdrop, it is vitally important that emerging-market and developing economies avoid thinking in terms of a business-as-usual policy package for recovery because it would likely result in a lost decade of development. Rather, governments should take exceptional and urgent action to tackle the combined impact of cascading crises and the interlinkages between people, the planet and the economy while adapting to post-pandemic realities. An urgent pair of priorities is to recover the human capital that has been lost in the wake of the pandemic, and to invest in creating new human capital for a resilient recovery. Human capital accumulation is not only a productive investment but also critical for green, resilient and inclusive development. Investing in people helps transitioning to a greener economy by reskilling workers to move out of pollution-heavy industries and build the skills needed for green industries. Education for girls, together with family planning, reproductive and sexual health, and economic opportunities for women can have a positive impact on resource use and the environment in fragile and conflict-affected states. Those who have good health and nutrition, relevant and adequate education, savings and alternative livelihoods, as well as a safety net for when things go wrong, can weather a climate shock or pandemic far better than those who do not. Likewise, service delivery systems that are adequately staffed and supplied and adaptive will be able to weather the next crisis. For growth to be truly inclusive, good-quality education, health care, and safety-net programs must reach the poorest and address the needs of the most vulnerable, including people with disabilities. PROTECT AND INVEST in people 06 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance This Approach Paper complements the Green Resilient and Inclusive Development vision presented to the World Bank Development Committee at the Spring 2021 Meetings, which entails investing in human capital to address core development and sustainability challenges. The paper outlines the role of public finance in advancing human capital outcomes and discusses policy priorities with the overarching objective of supporting a resilient recovery. It shares innovative approaches that have been employed by various countries to improve child nutrition and early-child development; get children back to school and ensure high-quality learning; build shock-resistant, service-delivery platforms, and support livelihoods and productive inclusion, particularly for women and the marginalized. The paper shows how better governance can improve the impact of government expenditure on human capital outcomes. It provides examples of evidence-based policy prioritization, policy coordination, and outcome-oriented management of government budgets and human resources, with an emphasis on accountability for results, facilitated by digital technologies. Importantly, the paper explores new avenues for securing resources to pursue human capital priorities. It shows how to find space within constrained budgets, identify the most cost-effective reforms, and protect those specific budget lines that are critical for the continuation of services that have long-term implications for human capital outcomes. Using the lens of human capital outcomes, the paper also explores new opportunities for raising domestic revenues, for approaching debt restructuring and relief, and for planning for future crises. It shows how environment tax reforms and the removal of energy subsidies can create fiscal space for human capital expenditures, while curbing the use of fossil fuels that have negative consequences for health and the environment. This Approach Paper framed the discussion that took place at the Fifth Human Capital Ministerial Conclave in April 2021. As such, it reflects the innovative experiences shared at the Conclave, and seeks to inform further efforts by governments and international development partners to lay the foundations for a green, resilient and inclusive recovery. MAMTA MURTHI AYHAN KOSE World Bank Vice President Acting Vice President, Equitable for Human Development Growth, Finance and Institutions (EFI) and Director, Prospects Group 07 PROTECT AND INVEST in people EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Over the past decade, although significant human the knowledge and skills of the current generation capital deficits persisted, many countries made of school children, especially those from poor and important progress in improving their human vulnerable households. Recent estimates by World capital. Today, the COVID-19 pandemic threatens to Bank staff suggest that learning poverty may increase reverse many of those gains and recreate preexisting from 53 percent to 63 percent in low- and middle- challenges. Urgent action is needed to protect hard- income countries and that at least 24 million children, won advances in human capital, particularly among from preprimary to tertiary-level education worldwide, the poor and the vulnerable. may never return to school. This, combined with the deskilling effects of prolonged unemployment and A stable and lasting recovery will hinge on underemployment, will likely lower future productivity restoring human capital while bolstering service and earnings in many countries. Further, women delivery systems that can build, protect and utilize suffer disproportionately from joblessness, domestic it. What is human capital? It is the knowledge, skills, care burdens, and gender-based violence, as well as and health that people accumulate over their lives. from unintended pregnancies and maternal deaths. It is undeniable that people’s health and education have intrinsic value, but human capital can also serve This calls for ensuring the adequacy, efficiency, and as a means to important and fulfilling ends, enabling sustainability of public spending toward human people, for instance, to realize their potential as capital outcomes, especially during periods of fiscal productive members of society. Greater human capital tightening such as the current one. High-priority is associated with higher earnings for people and strategic investments would reduce permanent higher incomes for countries. Building human capital human capital losses and position human capital among the poor and the vulnerable also improves for economic recovery. Immediate priorities include equity and social cohesion. restoring health, protecting young children from malnutrition and other harm, bringing children back to Thus, investing in people must take center stage in school and recovering learning losses, and supporting any plan to pursue and achieve green, resilient and labor income opportunities. In the medium term, inclusive development. For rich and poor countries sustained economic recovery will hinge on making alike, however, the transition from crisis to recovery further progress with universal health coverage, remains challenging. The pandemic is exacerbating early-childhood development, and learning and skills a number of worrisome trends seen over the past development; improving the relevance of tertiary decade that threaten to erode growth prospects education to the labor market; designing adaptive in developing economies. These include a slow- social protections; and emphasizing women’s down in investment, productivity, employment, and economic empowerment. poverty reduction; rising debt; and the accelerating destruction of natural capital. For the first time in a Concurrently, in partnership with the private generation, the pandemic has reversed what had sector, governments can reimagine service been a steady but inexorable fall in global poverty. delivery systems in the context of an increasingly It is estimated, additionally, that in 2020 it pushed digitalizing world. This will involve building digital more than 100 million people into extreme poverty—a infrastructure and strengthening institutions for number that is projected to increase in 2021. preparedness, coordination, financing, and service delivery. Key areas for systems strengthening Unless they are addressed with decisive include health systems for pandemic preparedness investments, the scars of COVID-19 on human with integrated and people-centered primary health capital and future productivity could deepen care systems, education service delivery that does and turn permanent. Malnutrition and prolonged not leave disadvantaged children behind, and social exposure to stress can have multiple, cumulative, protection and labor systems that can adapt nimbly long-term impacts on children. School closures and to changing needs and emergent crises. the increased likelihood of school dropout are eroding PROTECT AND INVEST in people 08 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance Strengthening governance will be critical for to finance investment in climate-change mitigation restoring citizens’ trust and ensuring that spending and adaptation, while discouraging environmentally has the desired impact on human capital outcomes. damaging activities, and generating health and Studies have shown that merely increasing spending climate co-benefits. In addition, the increased in the education or health sectors does not devolution of education and health spending to necessarily translate to better outcomes. What is local governments highlights the importance of local required is policy prioritization, strong coordination finances, especially property taxation. across ministries, agencies, and jurisdictions, and an emphasis on evidence-based policymaking. The Investments directed toward human capital management of government budgets and human accumulation and utilization are not only resources will need to become more outcome- productive but also critical for a green, resilient oriented, with an emphasis on accountability for and inclusive recovery, which calls for mobilizing results, and facilitated by digital technologies. resources through various saving initiatives and Governments can renew the social contract around vehicles. COVID-19 hit the world at the same time human capital, restoring the trust of citizens through as the ongoing climate crisis and this combination of more transparency and opportunities for citizens’ two major shocks has been devastating to the poor participation in policymaking and resource allocation. and the vulnerable. Hence, the collective response to the crisis should aim at a strong recovery that Securing resources for human capital involves addresses not only COVID-19’s immediate impact but placing human capital outcomes at the center of also the longer-term climate crisis. Savings created the budget process and prioritizing expenditures from the Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) are that contribute to human capital accumulation and already being directed toward supporting the most utilization. Securing resources for human capital vulnerable and to sectors contributing to protecting priorities can involve finding space within budgets, and rebuilding human capital. pursuing cost-effective reforms, and reprogramming budgets toward priorities while shielding critical Moving forward, debt-restructuring sustainability spending lines from fiscal adjustment. Under fiscal bonds, sovereign wealth funds, and private funding stress and when fiscal adjustments are needed, it is can all be leveraged to support green investments essential to identify and protect those specific budget and the required accompanying human capital lines that are critical for the continuation of services investments and reskilling of the workforce. that have long-term implications for human capital Furthermore, drawing on experience from previous outcomes. crises as well as the coronavirus pandemic, countries will benefit from proper fiscal planning, risk reduction Raising domestic revenues, debt restructuring and preparedness. Adaptive social protection and and relief, and planning for future crises are all resilient service delivery systems, for example, part of this strategy. Countries with long-standing can mitigate the impact of crises on human capital, challenges in raising government revenues have six facilitate an efficient fiscal response to them, and broad strategies that they can use to increase funding drive a strong recovery. for human capital: a) increasing overall revenue collection through the broadening of the tax base; b) improving tax equity where the tax burden rises with the taxpayer’s income or wealth; c) including soft earmarks to provide additional and ringfenced funding streams for human capital investments; d) introducing health taxes to discourage harmful consumption through financial disincentives; e) offering incentives to taxpayers for investing in human capital; and f ) using environmental taxes 09 PROTECT AND INVEST in people INTRODUCTION On April 5, 2021, the Spring Meetings Human Capital Project Ministerial Conclave, hosted by the World Bank Group in Washington DC, focused on the sustainable financing of human capital investments. This Approach Paper was prepared to frame the discussion at the meeting and has been revised to reflect contributions from the ministers of finance and planning who joined the discussion. The paper considers the role of public finance for human capital as countries seek to recover from the COVID-19 crisis and lays a foundation for inclusive, resilient and sustainable development. The paper calls for action toward building and utilizing human capital to promote economic recovery. It defines the problem in relation to human capital outcomes and outlines three areas for action: policy priorities, governance, and fiscal space for building and utilizing human capital. It highlights recent innovations and presents actionable steps for the short term, as well as directions for the longer term, by country context, with the overarching objective of promoting inclusive, resilient and sustainable recovery. Chapter 1 takes note of long-standing problems and pre-COVID-19 trends as well as COVID-19’s impact on human capital, and summarizes the underlying financing and institutional impediments to building human capital, including financing adequacy, expenditure efficiency, and service delivery. It underscores the role for public finance by pointing to the role of human capital investments—that is, investments across sectors to build, protect and utilize human capital—in generating positive economic and social externalities. Chapter 2 identifies policy priorities across sectors based on evidence-based theories of change for human capital outcomes. It outlines strategies for restoring health, protecting young children, bringing children back to school in order to recover learning losses, and supporting labor income opportunities. Looking at the longer term, the chapter emphasizes universal health coverage, resilient education systems to enhance learning, adaptive social protection, and women’s economic empowerment. Chapter 3 outlines institutional approaches to supporting prioritization, addressing trade-offs in government budgets, and raising the efficiency and value for money of government expenditures toward human capital outcomes in the aftermath of the COVID-19 crisis. The chapter emphasizes the vital role of policy and resource coordination across ministries, agencies and levels of government. It calls for adapting budget processes and introducing results-based orientations both in allocating and in managing the human and financial resources of the public sector. Chapter 4 looks at revenue mobilization through a human capital lens, recognizing the real-world constraints imposed by fiscal tightening and rising levels of debt. It examines how countries can reprogram budgets, raise domestic revenue, engage in debt restructuring and relief, and plan for future crises while advancing human capital priorities toward a strong recovery. PROTECT AND INVEST in people 10 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance Chapter 1: HUMAN CAPITAL FOR RECOVERY AND RESILIENT INCLUSIVE DEVELOPMENT 11 PROTECT AND INVEST in people CHAPTER 1: HUMAN CAPITAL FOR RECOVERY AND RESILIENT INCLUSIVE DEVELOPMENT KEY MESSAGES • Human capital is a key driver of growth that comes with substantial positive externalities and builds a rationale for rethinking the role of public finance in human capital investments. • The COVID-19 pandemic has unleashed a global health emergency and an unprecedented economic crisis, with impacts on multiple fronts from health, education, and nutrition to jobs, gender equity, and socioeconomic equality—impacts that have exacerbated preexisting human capital deficits and threaten to roll back a decade of progress in human capital accumulation. • By prioritizing human capital investments and improving the efficiency of the underlying delivery systems and institutions, public finance can not only help drive a green, resilient and inclusive recovery from COVID-19 but also provide a foundation for future productivity and growth. H uman capital—the knowledge, skills, and land, forests, water and protected areas) are health that people accumulate throughout interdependent in critical ways. Good jobs translate their lives, enabling them to realize their investments in education and skills into earnings, potential as productive members of society— carbon-free infrastructure generates health benefits, is critical to the productivity and wellbeing of poverty reduction alleviates pressure on marginal individuals and communities and to countries’ lands and natural resources, and improved practices economic growth. Human capital accounts for two- in the meat industry help address climate change thirds of total wealth globally and is a key driver and the transmission of zoonotic diseases. Managing of inclusive growth in an increasingly integrated this interdependence is a key challenge for this world (Lange, Wodon, and Carey 2018). Countries period in history. Solutions include spatial targeting can accelerate their economic growth, enhance of human capital investments, with programs for equity, and reduce poverty by building and utilizing economic restructuring such as the transition toward human capital in concert with other types of capital de-carbonization, and structuring human capital investments, and by leveraging a favorable business investments to ensure the sustainable development climate and good governance (Bakker et al. 2020). and preservation of other forms of capital. Healthy and well-educated people, free of poverty, contribute not only to economic growth as productive Countries face a range of human capital challenges workers but also bring about a range of other positive that predate the COVID-19 crisis, notably long- social and economic externalities such as social standing structural human capital deficits, limited cohesion and environmental protection. financing, and institutional impediments for delivering high-quality, efficient, human capital Realizing the full potential of human capital investments. Globally, the 2020 Human Capital depends on the effective management of the Index (HCI) shows that, before the pandemic, a child complex interrelationships between human, could expect to attain an average of 56 percent of produced, and natural capital. Human capital, his or her potential productivity as a future worker. produced capital (including infrastructure, However, a child born in a low-income country manufacturing and machinery), and natural capital (LIC) could expect to attain only 37 percent. In (including oil, gas, coal, minerals, agricultural contrast, for a child born in a high-income country PROTECT AND INVEST in people 12 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance (HIC), this figure is 70 percent (Gatti et al. 2021). Besides the virus’s devastating direct effects Similar disparities exist within countries across on morbidity and mortality, the COVID-19 crisis socioeconomic groups and geographic areas. For poses substantial risks to human capital through example, on average, a Brazilian child today can several other pathways (WHO 2020a). Key among be expected to achieve 55 percent of his or her these is the disruption of essential services, including productive potential but in the best-performing lifesaving and primary health and nutrition services, municipality this increases to 72 percent, on par with childcare, education, and community services. The the average among HICs, while children in the worst- mitigation measures taken to contain the pandemic performing municipality can expect to achieve only have had severe consequences for livelihoods and 38 percent, again comparable to the average for LICs. food security. Supply disruptions have increased the price and reduced the availability of essential Human capital priorities, and the options available commodities, including perishable and nutritious for addressing them, vary across and within foods. Less visibly, the stress of insecurity, isolation countries. Yet strengthening service delivery systems and being quarantined can be causally linked to an is an imperative in all countries, both for addressing increase in depression, domestic violence and abuse. the COVID-19 crisis in the short term and for laying the What began as a health pandemic and economic foundation for a longer-term inclusive, resilient and crisis is becoming a financial crisis for many countries, sustainable recovery. The urgent response to control putting growing strain on government budgets for the spread of the virus and address the impacts of services that are essential to building, protecting the crisis in order to restore human capital should and utilizing human capital. The dramatic impacts on align with the long-term priorities of human capital human capital include: development and utilization. • Increased morbidity and mortality. Nine out of Public finance has a critical role to play in restoring ten countries report challenges in maintaining and making productive use of human capital during coverage of the most essential services (WHO and beyond the COVID-19 crisis. The crisis has 2020b), with dramatic consequences for compounded preexisting problems of weak domestic morbidity and mortality that may surpass the resource mobilization, low levels of human capital direct impacts of the virus itself. In LICs and lower- investments, high levels of debt, and poor value middle-income countries (LMICs), disruptions in for money. These problems are particularly acute maternal and child health services and access to for lower-income countries where fiscal constraints food could result in close to 2.5 million deaths of and human capital deficits are the most severe. mothers and children in one year. Robertson et Policymakers need to balance saving lives and al. (2020) project up to a 45 percent increase in livelihoods today with laying the groundwork for more under-five mortality and a 39 percent increase in equitable, sustainable and resilient future growth. maternal mortality per month on average across 118 LICs and middle-income countries (MICs), assuming a six-month disruption in access to core health services and to food. The rise in maternal 1.1 The Human Capital Impact mortality is driven primarily by the reduced of the COVID-19 Crisis coverage of critical childbirth interventions, while the reduced coverage of antibiotics for The COVID-19 crisis threatens to reverse a pneumonia and neonatal sepsis and of oral decade of progress in hard-won human capital rehydration solution for diarrhea is a primary accumulation. Before COVID-19, advances in human driver for increased child mortality (Robertson capital, although perhaps not rapid enough to meet et al. 2020). A substantial rise in cases of, and many of the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) deaths from, infectious diseases other than targets, had nevertheless been progressing at a COVID-19 is also expected, given disruptions steady pace in most of the world. The COVID-19 crisis in basic primary health services. Deaths from may result in the loss of a decade of human capital HIV, malaria and tuberculosis are expected to progress, as measured by HCI metrics such as child increase by up to 10 percent, 20 percent, and stunting, learning-adjusted years of schooling, and 36 percent, respectively, over the next five years the probability of survival. (Hogan et al. 2020). Projections by the WHO 13 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 1: HUMAN CAPITAL FOR RECOVERY AND RESILIENT INCLUSIVE DEVELOPMENT for malaria in Sub-Saharan Africa, based on to lose US$10 trillion in future lifetime earnings— interruptions in campaigns for insecticide-treated equivalent to 8 percent of global GDP (Azevedo nets, and a 75 percent reduction in access to et al. 2020). For youth in universities and TVET effective antimalarial medicines, would mean institutions, the drop in hands-on training, skill returning to malaria mortality levels not seen in certification, and labor market links could reduce two decades (WHO 2020c). their employment opportunities in the future. • Rising food and nutrition insecurity and • High global unemployment and income loss. malnutrition. Increases in food prices and Jobs have been lost because of the lockdowns. disruptions in food supply chains, coupled with The International Labor Organization (ILO) health service disruptions and reductions in the estimates a global loss of 255 million full-time incomes of the poor, are contributing to rising equivalent jobs in 2020. The subsequent labor hunger, malnutrition, and a record number of income loss before income support is estimated people in need of humanitarian assistance at US$3.7 trillion. Projections for 2021 indicate a (United Nations 2021). COVID-19 may have continued employment deficit that will translate caused food insecurity in 2020 for almost into 90 million to 130 million full-time equivalent 100 million people. Phone surveys conducted job losses (ILO 2021). by the World Bank (n.d.) confirm the widespread impact of COVID-19 on household incomes • Growing inequalities and poverty. The crisis is and food and nutrition security (Pirlea et al. exacerbating inequalities and reversing historic 2020). Rising food prices and disrupted health declines in poverty. Inequality is widening for and nutrition services will likely result in up to an women, youth, and low-skilled and informal additional 9.3 million wasted and 2.6 million stunted workers and their families. Estimated global children globally, 168,000 child deaths, 2.1 million youth employment losses in 2020 amounted to cases of maternal anemia, 2.1 million children born 8.7 percent compared to 3.7 percent for adults to malnourished women, and US$29.7 billion in aged 25+. In a selection of 50 countries in the future productivity losses as a result of stunting second quarter of 2020, the average job loss for and child mortality (Osendarp et al. 2020). low-skilled workers was 10.8 percent compared to 7.5 percent for middle-skilled and 2.5 percent • Widespread learning losses. At the peak of the for high-skilled workers (ILO 2021). The pandemic pandemic, 94 percent of students worldwide and its response measures have severely were out of school (Gatti et al. 2021 World impacted the self-employed and households Bank 2020i). Even by conservative estimates, that obtain their income in the informal economy. the resulting learning losses may range from Further, extreme poverty is expected to increase 0.3 to 0.9 quality-adjusted years of schooling— for the first time in over two decades. Using the an expected decline from an average of 7.9 to extreme poverty rate of US$1.90 a day, the World 7.3 years in LICs and MICs, respectively—undoing Bank estimates that COVID-19 raised the number much of the progress achieved in recent years of the extremely poor by 119–124 million in 2020. (Azevedo et al. 2020). Learning poverty, as This number includes 31 million who would have measured by the percentage of 10-year-olds otherwise escaped extreme poverty. Evidence who cannot read and understand a simple story, from previous global economic shocks suggests could rise from 53 percent before the pandemic that the COVID-19 crisis is further widening to 63 percent. At least 24 million students, from income inequality within countries, given its preprimary to tertiary-level education, may disproportionate economic effects on lower- never return to school, a substantial increase income demographic groups (Furceri et al. 2020). from the pre-pandemic baseline of at least 258 million out-of-school children. Exacerbating • Widening gender gaps. COVID-19 is the already large learning inequalities present in exacerbating hazards faced by adolescent girls, many countries is the fact that children from poor ranging from increases in school dropout and and vulnerable backgrounds are more severely child marriage rates, to adolescent childbearing impacted by disruptions in access to schooling. and violence. For example, following school In total, children affected by learning losses stand closures during the 2014–2016 Ebola crisis, PROTECT AND INVEST in people 14 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance BOX 1.1: COVID-19 PUTS WOMEN’S JOBS AT RISK Worldwide, two-thirds of health and social pandemic is adding to this preexisting burden. care workers are women (Boniol et al. 2019). Women’s livelihoods and work have been Girls and women are on the frontlines of disproportionately impacted. Women are care provision in both formal and informal over-represented in informal sector jobs, jobs. This includes occupations that are often which are at a higher risk of being lost and undervalued and poorly paid, despite being are the least robust in terms of providing essential in the pandemic response, such as protection against job loss, illness, and old aged-care and disability support. Women’s age. In 35 out of 40 countries surveyed by over-representation in care services puts them phone during the early stage of the COVID-19 at greater risk of infection with severe acute pandemic, women respondents were more illness, as well as physical and psychological likely to stop working than male respondents pressures. They are usually the first to be called due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Globally, the upon to care for ailing relatives, young children, ILO (2021) reports that the incidence of job or elderly parents. Even before the pandemic, losses in 2020 was higher among women women spent three times the amount of time (5.0 percent) than men (3.9 percent), further engaged in unpaid care as men (ILO 2018). The exacerbating gender gaps in employment. many girls did not return to school, and teenage 1.2 The Fiscal Impact pregnancy rates rose. Women and girls suffer disproportionately from domestic care burdens, of the COVID-19 Crisis lack of childcare, and gender-based violence. They are also more vulnerable, given their labor COVID-19 has triggered a devastating recession market status (see box 1.1). with prospects for recovery dependent on the success of containing the virus and the availability • Without any remediation, COVID-19’s impact of adequate fiscal support. The World Bank could leave an entire generation behind. The estimates a decline of global GDP by 4.3 percent outlook for future employment, productivity, and in 2020, which constitutes the most severe global earnings is sobering. Past experience shows recession since World War II. Acknowledging that that workers who start looking for a job during prospects remain uncertain, the World Bank projects a recession experience significant negative a recovery for 2021 and 2022 of 4.0 percent and impacts on employment and income compared 3.8 percent, respectively. HICs are projected to see to those with better timing. This “COVID-19 a stronger decline and a more subdued recovery. In Generation” includes recent graduates, first-time contrast, the decline in developing economies is likely job seekers, and workers who have lost jobs due to be less pronounced and the recovery stronger. It to the pandemic. They are likely to be scarred is projected that LICs will experience a decline by from this crisis the longer they are out of work or 0.9 percent in 2020 and recover in 2021 and 2022 underemployed. The outlook is further dimmed by 3.3 and 5.2 percent, respectively. The prospects of by the pandemic’s effect on children, which may recovery will depend on the successful deployment lead to an irreversible loss in their human capital. of vaccines and the enhanced effectiveness of the Simulated results from the 2020 HCI report show health response to the pandemic. These prospects that in 20 years, approximately 46 percent of the also depend on the continuation of fiscal stimulus workforce in a typical country (people ages 20 and monetary easing, especially in developed to 65) will be composed of individuals who were economies, and of improved financing conditions either in school or under age five during the for developing economies (World Bank 2021b). pandemic (Gatti et al. 2021). 15 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 1: HUMAN CAPITAL FOR RECOVERY AND RESILIENT INCLUSIVE DEVELOPMENT FIGURE 1.1: FISCAL IMPACT OF THE COVID-19 CRISIS Fiscal (lines) and Debt (columns) Impact of COVID-19 14 140 12 120 COVID-19 Response (Column) and Share of Health Response (Line) 10 100 20% 18% 8 80 6 60 16% 4 40 14% 15% Fiscal Deficit, % of GDP 2 20 12% Debt, % of GDP Percent of GDP 0 0 Share in Total -2 -20 10% 10% -4 -40 8% -6 -60 6% -8 -80 5% 4% -10 -100 -12 -120 2% -14 -140 0% 0% 2018 2019 2020 2021 High Income World Middle Income Low Income World High Income Middle Income Low Income Health Sector-Budgetary Support Non-Health Sector-Budgetary Support World High Income Middle Income Low Income Liquidity Support Share of Health Source: World Bank Staff, based on IMF Fiscal Monitor, 2021 (panel a and based on IMF Fiscal Measures Database, 2021 (panel b). The fiscal impact of the crisis has been large, The latter includes equity injections, loans, asset leading to widening fiscal deficits and substantial purchase/debt assumptions, guarantees, and increases in debt (see figure 1.1). The global fiscal quasi-fiscal operations, mainly to firms but also deficit soared to 11.8 percent of GDP at the end of to households. HICs represent 84 percent of this 2020, up from 3.8 percent in 2019 (IMF 2021a). The global support. Of the remaining 16 percent, China highest increase was in the HICs, with a 2020 deficit represents 6.4 percent (IMF 2021a). of 13.3 percent compared to 3.3 percent a year earlier. This was essentially due to a combination of increases Health-related support, though, has been relatively in spending and declines in revenues. In the MICs, modest. Of the 13.5 percent of global GDP devoted the deficit reached 10.3 percent of GDP in 2020, up to the pandemic response, only 1.0 percentage point from 4.8 percent in 2019, and in the LICs it reached of GDP (7.4 percent of the total) went to the health 5.7 percent in 2020, up from 4.0 percent in 2019. For sector. In the HICs, within the overall fiscal response of both, LICs and MICs, this is explained by a collapse in 19 percent of GDP, less than 7 percent went to health. revenues. Global debt reached 97.6 percent of GDP in In the MICs, fiscal assistance stood at 5.1 percent of 2020, up from 83.5 percent in 2019. Also, with respect GDP, with health accounting for 6 percent of the to debt levels, the largest increases are in the HICs total. In the LICs, the overall effort was 1.5 percent (123 percent in 2020 against 105 percent in 2019), of GDP, of which 17 percent went to health.1 Out of followed by the MICs (63 percent in 2020 against 3,991 COVID-19 fiscal interventions worldwide, only 54 percent in 2019), and finally the LICs (49 percent in 548 were related to the health sector (14 percent), on 2020 against 43 percent in 2019) (IMF 2021a). Some both the expenditure and revenue sides. By contrast, countries have just been through a decade of debt 1,884 measures were directed to businesses, 1,372 to accumulation, which raises concerns about a possible households, and 187 were unclassified.2 financial crisis (Kose et al. 2020). The COVID-19 crisis is already contributing to The unprecedented scale of the fiscal response to dramatic budget cuts across sectors, including the pandemic, however, has helped mitigate the education. In 65 percent of the LICs and LMICs, economic and social impact of the crisis. Global and in 33 percent of upper-middle-income countries fiscal support in 2020 reached US$14 trillion, or (UMICs) and HICs, education budgets declined after 13.5 percent of global GDP. Additional spending and the onset of the pandemic. These divergent trends foregone revenues amounted to US$7.8 trillion, or may exacerbate the preexisting disparity in education 7.4 percent of GDP, the rest being liquidity support. spending across countries (Al-Samarrai et al. 2021).3 PROTECT AND INVEST in people 16 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance 1.3 The Role of Public Finance Sustainable and inclusive recovery from the COVID-19 crisis requires a balance between the in Human Capital Investments prudent phasing out of stimulus packages, especially for Recovery with a view to protecting the poor and the vulnerable, and increased investments in human, physical and Human capital investments have high rates of return natural capital, aligned with the long-term objectives and are well-positioned to generate significant of inclusion, resilience, sustainability, and more and positive economic and social externalities. There are better jobs. Besides addressing poverty and inequality, strong positive externalities from investments in health well-targeted human capital investments can help spur systems, particularly primary health, as well as in research economic growth and overall business confidence. and management of zoonotic diseases, pandemic preparedness, and water and sanitation systems. In the past, the growth dividends from reform efforts Environmental investments, encompassing sustainable were recognized and anticipated by investors in agriculture, food and nutrition security, land management, upgrades to their long-term business expectations and urban planning, and disaster risk management, are private sector investments. Because many countries similarly essential for the health of the planet and its will likely tighten their fiscal policies in 2021, the World residents. For instance, in Jamaica, the Production Bank Group stresses that developing economies “will Incentive Programme was implemented with the aim of need to tackle the challenge of avoiding premature increasing and sustaining agricultural production to meet fiscal tightening in the short term, but unwinding fiscal market demand as well as protecting the livelihood of support measures and ensuring fiscal sustainability rural farm families and positively impacting national food over the medium term” (World Bank 2021b). The security (States of Guernsey 2020, 2021). IMF (2021a) underscores that fiscal support “needs to be maintained but tailored to the evolution of Early-childhood development, education, and skills the pandemic and the economy.” Both institutions development have lifetime and inter-generational recognize the overall economic role of investments benefits, with established impacts on growth, labor in people and call for protecting public spending on income, and equality as well as social cohesion. human capital. Some countries are already thinking Investments to strengthen social protection, promote ahead in terms of sustainability of spending. Such employment, and improve the labor market outcomes is the case with Azerbaijan, where the government of typically underutilized or underpaid groups such as has budgeted funds to ensure the sustainability of women, youth, and vulnerable populations generate measures to support employment and social welfare. positive economic and social externalities. For example, investing in good-quality, affordable childcare can The COVID-19 crisis has accelerated structural improve women’s employment, overall productivity, transformations that can strengthen human capital, and child outcomes. Government financial support advance digital inclusion, and move economies and active labor market programs can reduce the away from carbon-based activities. The crisis is long-term negative effects of the COVID-19 crisis on accelerating and shaping profound changes in the workers’ future employability and income. Besides factors of production, technologies and norms for support for wage employment, entrepreneurship the organization of work and service delivery. Public support for women, youth, and vulnerable populations finance can create the right environment for leveraging can further help tap into their often underutilized the private sector (as well as development assistance economic potential. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the and remittances) in the expansion, adaptation, and government modified the Guarantee Fund to support utilization of human capital for the recovery and the development of entrepreneurship by facilitating beyond. As new opportunities arise while others close, prospective entrepreneurs’ access to funds they need human capital is assuming growing importance for for conducting business activities, with a special focus resilient and sustainable growth. on young and women entrepreneurs (Office of the President, Republic of Srpska 2020). 1 World Bank staff calculations based on data from the IMF (2021a). 2 “Fiscal Policies in Response to the Crisis,” a database constructed by World Bank staff for internal use, last updated in September 2020. 3 The findings of this joint World Bank-UNESCO publication are based on a sample of 29 countries that represent 54 percent of the world’s school-age population. The comparison of pre- and post-COVID budgets looks at differences in budgets prepared before and after the onset of the pandemic in March 2020. 17 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 2: PUBLIC SPENDING TO BUILD, PROTECT AND UTILIZE HUMAN CAPITAL CHAPTER 2: PUBLIC SPENDING TO BUILD, PROTECT AND UTILIZE HUMAN CAPITAL KEY MESSAGES • An outcome-oriented expenditure framework helps identify a coherent set of pro-poor, high-impact expenditure programs across sectors based on evidence and country contexts. • To reduce permanent human capital losses due to the COVID-19 crisis, the immediate priorities are to restore health, protect young children from malnutrition and other harm, bring children back to school and recover learning losses, prevent the “scarring” of youth, and support labor income opportunities. • Further improvements in universal health coverage, early-childhood development, learning, social protection and women’s economic empowerment can contribute to an inclusive, resilient and sustainable recovery. • Recent innovations and technology can help strengthen service delivery systems. R estoring and further building human capital Solutions are not as simple as merely allocating amid the COVID-19 pandemic with the aim more budgetary resources to social sectors. The of making a resilient recovery requires relationships between public spending and human coordinated multisector actions. Governments capital outcomes are not straightforward. The efficiency could use an evidence-based results chain for as well as the adequacy of public spending matter each human capital priority in order to construct an for human capital outcomes (Andrews et al. 2019; outcome-oriented expenditure framework and a World Bank 2003, 2018d; Gottret and Schieber 2006). coherent set of pro-poor, high-impact, multisector expenditure programs. Beyond efforts to control the An outcome-oriented framework helps determine a pandemic with vaccinations and other public health coherent set of pro-poor, high-impact expenditure measures, it is necessary to mitigate the risks of programs across sectors. The right mix of policies and permanent human capital loss in the short run and expenditures depends on a country’s human capital address long-standing structural deficits in human priorities and on the alignment of specific policies, capital accumulation over the medium term. This will programs and expenditures with each selected require sustained investments and the strengthening human capital outcome in a given context (box 2.1). of service delivery systems. Recent innovations and technology can give countries opportunities to A multisector theory of change, tailored to a specific accelerate their progress in these areas. human capital outcome, may serve as a guide across sectors. That theory of change can combine 2.1 A Human Capital, Outcome- global evidence, including impact evaluations, with spatial analysis of outcomes and constraints in each Oriented Framework for Public country to support expenditure prioritization at the Expenditure national and subnational levels. Early-childhood development, for example, may require a different As countries emerge from the COVID-19 crisis, mix of investments in women’s empowerment, many face gaps in human capital financing. Even nutrition, food security, water, sanitation, pollution before the pandemic, many countries struggled control, and safety nets in different local contexts. to mobilize and allocate adequate resources for basic human capital investments. Those gaps have Global evidence about effective interventions can widened. The share of national income spent on inform country choices. A publication by the Global education, for example, would have to double in LICs Education Advisory Panel (2020) discusses “best-buy” to achieve the SDGs (World Bank and UNESCO 2021). or “good-buy” interventions based on rigorous 19 PROTECT AND INVEST in people INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance BOX 2.1: IDENTIFYING HUMAN CAPITAL PRIORITIES Benchmark comparisons of the Human Capital Index (HCI) and the Utilization-Adjusted Human Capital Index (UHCI) can show a country’s relative performance across different dimensions of human capital accumulation and its productive use. Table 2.1 illustrates the HCI and its components for two countries in the same region. The high stunting rate in Country A and poor learning outcomes in Country B both have policy implications. TABLE 2.1: ILLUSTRATIVE SCENARIO OF THE HUMAN CAPITAL INDEX IN ONE REGION Country A Country B Region Indicator Male + Female Male + Female Male + Female HCI Component 1: Survival Probability of Survival to Age 5 0.974 0.985 0.982 HCI Component 2: School Expected Years of School 9.7 10.7 12.1 Harmonized Test Scores 405 377 405 HCI Component 3: Health Survival Rate from Age 15 to 60 0.847 0.888 0.862 Fraction of Children Under 5 Not Stunted 0.533 0.852 Human Capital Index (HCI) 2020 0.46 0.50 0.56 The HCI is by no means a comprehensive rate at lower-secondary schools, with only 44 measure of human capital development. While percent of children who start grade 1 finishing all the components of the HCI are important, grade 12. This leads to both truncated learning there are other important measures that for and other social challenges for adolescents, practical reasons are not included in it. A more including a relatively high incidence of teenage systematic assessment could use a lifecycle pregnancies. About 40 percent of secondary approach to identify which demographic groups school girls who drop out cite pregnancy as are falling behind and why. A recent World Bank the reason. Reducing the number of secondary report on Eswatini (World Bank 2020f) adopted school dropouts, especially among female this approach to assess the relative needs and students, emerges as a priority from this analysis. potential of people in three phases of their lifecycle: early childhood (from pregnancy to For a resilient recovery and beyond, the UHCI age 5), school age (ages 6–18) and youth to provides further information to shape policies adulthood (19 and older). Among the challenges that make full use of human capital. The UHCI identified are relatively high infant mortality and points out the existing gaps in the utilization of child malnutrition because of factors such as human capital to prompt economies to better a high incidence of teenage pregnancies (30 use the available skills and experience of percent of all pregnancies). Major challenges their workers for increased labor productivity. for school-age children include a high dropout Source: World Bank Staff; World Bank 2020f. PROTECT AND INVEST in people 20 Chapter 2: PUBLIC SPENDING TO BUILD, PROTECT AND UTILIZE HUMAN CAPITAL FIGURE 2.1: ILLUSTRATIVE MULTISECTOR “THEORY OF CHANGE” FOR EARLY-CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT A MULTISECTORAL APPROACH TO EARLY YEARS INCREASE HUMAN CAPITAL REDUCE INEQUALITY CHILDREN REACH THEIR FULL POTENTIAL (with the physical, social and emotional capacities to learn, earn, innovate and compete) CHILDREN ARE HEALTHY & WELL CHILDREN RECEIVE EARLY CHILDREN ARE NURTURED NOURISHED, ESPECIALLY STIMULATION & LEARNING AND PROTECTED FROM IN THE FIRST 1,000 DAYS OPPORTUNITIES POVERTY AND STRESS • Good nutritional status of mothers • Positive and engaging interactions • Avoid household and community and expecting mothers with parents/caregivers stressors (neglect, violence, • Exclusive & continued breastfeeding • Opportunities for age-appropiate displacement, household shocks) • Proper feeding of <5 and play-based learning through • Positive emotional connections with • Immunization & Rx of childhood quality preschool programs parents/caregivers illnesses • Supportive discipline • Good hygiene practices DELIVERING ON THE ESSENTIAL INTERVENTIONS ABOVE REQUIRES EFFORTS ACROSS SECTORS Quality, Quality Maternal, Water, Educated and Family Leave Reduced Safety Nets Diverse and Child and Sanitation Empowered and Quality, Income and Response Affordable Reproductive and Hygiene Women Affordable Poverty to Shocks Food Health Services Childcare Source: Investing in the early years for growth and productivity (World Bank 2016). evaluations. To improve learning outcomes in Controlling the pandemic countries where schools lack water and electricity, for Both the restoration of human capital and resilient example, physical investments to create an enabling recovery hinge on addressing the COVID-19 learning environment, along with funding for qualified pandemic. This can come only through enhanced teachers, may deliver particularly high impact. To offer disease surveillance (including improvements in data another example: Targeted measures to improve the infrastructure, testing and laboratory services, behavior quality of teaching and reduce high school dropout change communication, quarantine and isolation rates among students from poor and socially capacity), management of COVID-19 cases, and the disadvantaged households may be most impactful in rollout of vaccines. countries that have good infrastructure and staffing. The spending needed to control the pandemic is 2.2 Restoring Human Capital substantial. The costs of achieving adequate levels of vaccine coverage, it is estimated, will be approximately How can countries balance the twin priorities of, on 2 percent of GDP in LICs and 0.7 percent of GDP in the one hand, mitigating the risks of permanent LMICs (Pongsapich and Brimble 1999). Dedicated losses of human capital and, on the other, building financing, along with national and international and utilizing human capital for economic recovery? coordination across a wide range of stakeholders, is The immediate priority of controlling the pandemic needed to successfully deploy vaccines. Incomplete must be coupled with sustained government efforts coverage would be even more expensive than full to regain health, bring children back to school and coverage: Recent estimates suggest that the unequal recover learning losses, protect young children, allocation of COVID-19 vaccines could cost the global prevent the “scarring” of jobseekers, and support economy up to US$1.2 trillion a year (Hafner et al. 2020). labor income opportunities. 21 PROTECT AND INVEST in people INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance Regaining health programs. For example, during its recovery from the global financial crisis, Mexico expanded the coverage The immediate challenge is to secure the delivery of poor and informal worker households with of essential, pro-poor health services. In LICs, guaranteed essential health services from 31.1 million depending on the country, key spending policy people in 2009 to 55.6 million in 2013 (World Bank imperatives include immunization and child nutrition 2018b); and following the 1997 Asian crisis, Indonesia programs, maternal and reproductive health services, scaled up such services from nearly zero to more than infectious disease control programs, including HIV, 10 percent of the population (Pongsapich and Brimble tuberculosis, and malaria, and maintaining safe 1999). More recently, in response to COVID-19, Côte primary health care. In higher-income countries, the d’Ivoire extended three months of universal health focus may shift and expand toward noncommunicable coverage premiums to all beneficiaries of financial diseases, including catch-up screening programs. All support through cash transfers (Republic of countries need services that mitigate the diseases Madagascar 2020). Higher-income countries also and conditions that surged during the lock-down closed population gaps, including for noncitizen period—for example, mental disorders, gender-based residents. For example, during the global financial domestic violence, and substance abuse—while crisis, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Estonia maintaining access to life-saving medicines and extended entitlements to the long-term unemployed, emergency services. while Sweden improved coverage of undocumented migrants and asylum seekers. Amid crises, countries may be able to enhance the financial protection of the vulnerable. Possible Bringing children back to school and policy measures include lower copays, exemptions, and caps on out-of-pocket payments, reimbursement recovering learning losses of indirect costs of health care (for example, transport), Addressing the education crisis—the “silent and sick-leave benefits to compensate for health- pandemic” spurred by the health crisis—requires related income losses. For financial protection as well immediate action. Priority measures involve as effective disease control, several LICs and MICs, managing the continuity of education and improving including Ethiopia, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and and accelerating learning. Schools need support to Tajikistan, have been offering free COVID-19 services meet safety, inclusion, water, sanitation, hygiene, to the entire population (World Bank forthcoming). ventilation, and health standards for reopening. Some Others, such as Guernsey (States of Guernsey 2020, countries such as North Macedonia have implemented 2021) and Brazil (KPMG 2020), have extended paid in-kind transfers to provide food and hygiene products leave to those who fall sick with COVID-19, while in to beneficiaries of means-tested programs. Student Bahrain the Ministry of Health decided to shoulder the reenrollment and retention may require the pro-poor treatment expenses of COVID-19 patients for all provision of school supplies, school-feeding citizens and residents (Ministry of Health, Kingdom of programs, cash-transfer programs with soft Bahrain 2021). During the 2008–2009 global financial conditionality, scholarships, and girls’ empowerment crisis, 12 European countries reduced user fees for support. In St. Vincent and the Grenadines, the outpatient and inpatient care, lowering the cost to National Insurance Services (NIS) Back to School consumers of goods and services ranging from Voucher Programme provided school-supply outpatient drugs to diagnostic tests. Half of these vouchers to parents who had been laid off because countries also lowered charges on outpatient drugs of COVID-19 and were receiving temporary or introduced exemptions or caps. unemployment benefits (given to both insured formal workers and the self-employed) (National Insurance In the medium term, regaining health hinges on Services, St. Vincent and the Grenadines 2020). In reclaiming losses and resuming progress toward Zimbabwe, the COVID-19 School Children’s Food universal health coverage. Reversing growing Security and Nutrition project provides cash transfers coverage gaps requires expanding entitlements, to the most vulnerable families who have children in especially for the poor, unemployed, and agricultural primary school. Zimbabwe, the COVID-19 School and informal workers. In the wake of previous Children’s Food Security and Nutrition project economic crises, some LICs and MICs doubled down provides cash transfers to the most vulnerable families on their investments in universal health coverage who have children in primary school. PROTECT AND INVEST in people 22 Chapter 2: PUBLIC SPENDING TO BUILD, PROTECT AND UTILIZE HUMAN CAPITAL Many countries are rolling out education-response between education providers and private sector packages aimed at minimizing learning losses. employers. Kenya’s FY2020/21 budget includes a Here are some examples: Reenrollment and retention new youth employment scheme as part of its stimulus campaigns in Madagascar, Ethiopia, and Pakistan package (IMF 2021b). In Saudi Arabia, the Saudi focus on girls and students from marginalized Human Resources Development Fund announced an communities who are most at risk of dropping out. El increase in support for 100,000 workers through Salvador combines accelerated-learning recovery increased training (totaling around US$200 million). programs with an expansion of an early-warning The Fund also promotes remote-work tools. Boosting system and home visits to prevent at-risk youth from advanced skills and private sector links in tertiary dropping out. Uganda has transitioned its cash education can help drive innovation and growth and transfer and mentoring program, “Girls Empowering improve the labor market relevance of the programs Girls,” to a virtual mentoring model to ensure delivery on offer. Upskilling and reskilling workers for green continuity and has implemented remote enrollment jobs or for changing livelihoods due to shifting for preregistered beneficiaries (Kampala Capital City cropping patterns, sea-level rise, and other Authority n.d.). School feeding programs in Lao PDR, consequences of environmental degradation can Madagascar, and other countries are among the contribute to a greener recovery. The Build Bhutan efforts to bring students back to school. Reopening program aims to provide relief and support recovery schools with class sizes cut in half, and longer school through reskilling and provision of jobs to the newly days, are helping the continuity of education in unemployed and, at the same time, address shortages Equatorial Guinea (IMF 2021). A national tutoring of labor in sectors that previously relied on migrant program for vulnerable students has been set up in workers (Phub Gyem and Sonam Pem 2020). the UK with private sector participation. Protecting young children and building In the medium term, forward-looking education a foundation for human capital policies need to meet future skill needs. This includes redoubling efforts to enroll and reenroll development children in school, to expand access to early learning Coordinated investments can mitigate the and childcare, and to build literacy, numeracy, and cumulative adverse impacts of deprivations caused other foundational skills in countries where learning by the COVID-19 crisis. The immediate priority is to poverty remains a major obstacle to economic prevent severe deprivation such as malnutrition or inclusion. (Before the pandemic, at least 258 million exposure to toxic stress, and ensure continuity in children and youth of primary- and secondary-school access to basic health interventions for women and age were out of school worldwide—an underlying young children, as well as childcare and other structural problem likely to be made worse by the strategies to reduce the number of children who pandemic.) This may remain the priority in most LICs spend long periods in unsafe and unstimulating and MICs whose learning trajectories were not on environments while their parents work. For poor track to achieve reductions in learning poverty even households and vulnerable populations, core maternal, before the pandemic-induced learning losses. reproductive and child health and nutrition services, Lessons can be gained from successful interventions and early simulation and learning can be effectively such as Kenya’s Tusome program which, since 2014, complemented with cash transfers to support children, has accelerated learning by providing English and parents, and other caregivers. Kiswahili textbooks to all students in grades 1-3, training every lower primary school language Bhutan launched the Druk Gyalpo’s Relief Kidu to teacher on reading pedagogies, and equipping civil support the livelihoods of those affected by the society organizations with the tools and skills to pandemic and provided additional support to families support teachers (Wilichowski et al. 2020). At least ten with children. Uzbekistan extended the duration of education systems worldwide are participating in the social allowances for low-income families. In Colombia, “Accelerator Program” to accelerate learning poverty the Mis Manos Te Enseñan (My Hands Teach You) reduction (World Bank 2020j). Furthermore, all Initiative was started on March 20, 2020, the day after countries can foster skills demanded in the early-childhood centers were closed. It targets more 21st-century labor market—such as socioemotional than 1.7 million pregnant women and vulnerable skills, entrepreneurship, digital skills, and skills for children below age 5 through three activities: green jobs—by increasing effective cooperation (i) frequent outreach via phone to check in with families 23 PROTECT AND INVEST in people INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance on children’s health, nutrition and wellbeing and to Preventing the scarring of jobseekers and suggest activities that parents can do to promote supporting labor income children’s development; (ii) distribution of a learning kit, including a family guide and materials such as The COVID-19 generation of workers, recent paper, paint, chalk and crayons, to enable parents to graduates, the unemployed, and first-time carry out the activities in the family guide; and jobseekers, especially those among low-skilled and (iii) distribution of food baskets. more vulnerable workers, are at substantial risk of being scarred. Countries can prevent scarring through Longer-term improvements in early-childhood several short-term measures. Traditional wage outcomes require a multisectoral approach. This subsidies that support new hiring can be complemented would involve using available service delivery with measures that support employability as well as infrastructure as platforms for delivering or coordinating intermediation services to facilitate job transitions. multiple services and allowing the same households Technology can boost the implementation of these and children to access complementary services. Many labor market programs by, for example, minimizing countries use health clinics and community health physical contact but also making them more targeted workers to deliver both nutrition and parenting- and cost-effective. Resumption and expansion of child- focused child stimulation services. This approach and elderly-care services can support women’s reentry enhances child physical and cognitive development into the labor market. Measures to allow students to as evidenced, for example, by Pakistan’s Lady Health stay in school longer and delay their entry into the labor Worker program. Cash-transfer programs can also be market could also help prevent scarring. used as platforms to target vulnerable families, deliver income support, and leverage investments in In the short run, alleviating firms’ cashflow and children’s development. For extremely poor families offering targeted, temporary stimuli can spur overall in Madagascar, for example, the government has labor demand. For example, Pakistan allowed banks augmented its Vatsin’ankohonana (“family support”) to defer clients’ payments on principal loan obligations cash-transfer program with training and “nudges” that for up to a year and introduced deferrals on payments present behavioral choices to parents in a way that for energy. Egypt introduced deferrals on utility makes them more likely to select those options that payments. In Russia, deferrals on tax payments were will most improve their family health, nutrition practices, granted to the most affected companies during the the early development of their children, and parenting crisis. Thailand reduced social security contributions (Republic of Madagascar 2020). In Mexico, Colombia, of employers and employees from 5 percent to Niger and Peru, adding a parenting program to cash 0.1 percent of wages for 3 months. Ideally, these transfers has improved child-development outcomes, measures should be targeted to sectors that are labor- ranging from cognition and language to socioemotional intensive or have the potential for future job growth. development, across cases (Arriagada et al. 2018). Senegal introduced a community-based nutrition In labor markets characterized by a high degree of platform coupled with cash transfers to reduce stunting informality, assistance needs to reach workers in from 34 percent in 1992 to 17 percent in 2017 (World informal firms. This is best done through household- Bank 2021f ). Peru reduced the stunting rate from level social protection measures that go beyond the 28 percent in 2008 to 13 percent in 2016 following a extreme poor and include low-income informal strategy that mobilized national, regional and local workers. In the LICs and MICs, social assistance governments to address child malnutrition in a programs are helping to sustain livelihoods in the coordinated manner (Republic of Rwanda 2005). recovery and beyond, particularly for informal workers Indonesia’s National Strategy to Accelerate Stunting and household enterprises, and especially for female Prevention targeted approximately 48 million pregnant workers and female-headed households. For mothers and children under 2 within four years. The example, the Government of Argentina provided a Government of Rwanda has coordinated investments lump-sum payment of Arg$10,000 (US$155) to in social protection, primary health and early-childhood 3.6 million families of informal workers, self-employed, education to boost early-childhood development and domestic workers. In Burkina Faso, cash transfers outcomes, building on a strengthened service delivery totaling US$10 million (CFAF 5 billion) helped informal platform including birth registration and identification retailers, especially women retailers of produce. In (see box 2.2). Morocco, an electronic cash-transfer program is reaching half of the country’s informal-sector workers PROTECT AND INVEST in people 24 Chapter 2: PUBLIC SPENDING TO BUILD, PROTECT AND UTILIZE HUMAN CAPITAL BOX 2.2: IN RWANDA, A MULTISECTORAL APPROACH TO INVESTING IN THE EARLY YEARS The Government of Rwanda has leveraged Besides enhancing the coordination of integrated investments in nutrition and child-sensitive social ECD services and monitoring their effective delivery, protection, basic education, primary health, and investments and reforms in basic education are agriculture intensification to boost early-childhood under way. These are aimed at improving the development (ECD). The multisectoral stunting efficiency of student flow from one grade to the reduction program, which builds on Rwanda's next through age-appropriate enrollment in the national ECD strategic plan, focuses on 13 high- schools, and at improving the children’s school priority districts with the highest stunting rates, readiness by enhancing access to, and delivery along with four additional districts with high of, preprimary education. The reforms also include poverty rates. In these districts, poor families with the provision of remedial support to low-performing pregnant women and/or young children below students in basic education, which will also play a two years old benefit from nutrition-sensitive critical role in offsetting the impact of the COVID-19 direct support (NSDS) cash transfers, combined crisis as children restart classes after the closure of with demand-side incentives, to avail themselves schools for more than 11 months. of maternal and child health services. As a response to COVID-19, the government Concurrently, investments in health facilities has expanded coverage of NSDS cash transfers seek to improve these services. Poor families to ensure that poorer families with younger also receive an income opportunity to work as children receive this important support. Further caregivers at community-based ECD centers, strengthening and scale-up of these interventions which provide daycare to the younger children figure in the government's human capital along with knowledge to the parents on basic development reform program, with the intent nutrition, child care, and better parenting of delivering multisectoral solutions through practices. Large-scale information and outreach enhanced domestic financing, improvements in campaigns target all parents and caregivers delivery systems, and increased capacity at the for behavior change. A modernized civil decentralized level, including the appointment of registration system is being rolled out to boost dedicated human capital development officers at the registration of births and other vital events each Cell (the second-lowest administrative level through decentralization of the civil registrar structure in Rwanda). The government is adding function to the head of health facilities, using a the annual targets and reporting on the ECD digital link to the National ID database and other results into the performance contracts between relevant databases in the country. the national and the local decentralized entities. The overall program is being rigorously evaluated Source: World Bank Staff by the World Bank and the Government of Rwanda. (about 3 million workers). North Macedonia, at the Over the medium term, governments, in partnership beginning of the pandemic, accelerated the inclusion with the private sector, could boost training of the unemployed and workers in the informal programs to meet the demands of the industries of economy by providing quick streamlined access to the future and of reskilling workers for jobs in the the social protection system through additional cash green economy. In Ireland, for example, an additional transfers (International Labour Organization 2020). €200 million (US$242 million) has been allocated toward investment in training, education, skills Such programs can be phased out at a slower pace development, work-placement schemes, recruitment than other COVID-19 relief measures. Public works subsidies, and job search and assistance measures, adapted to COVID-19, including innovations such as to help those who have lost their jobs either find new digital public works, can help stimulate labor demand ones, retrain, or develop new skills, especially for toward the eventual recovery (Carranza et al. 2020). emerging growth sectors. In Canada, up to Uganda expanded the Urban Cash for Work Program CAD$750 million will be used to create a new Emissions to cover new beneficiaries, particularly in areas where Reduction Fund to support workers and reduce many informal-sector workers live (Carranza et al. 2020). emissions in Canada's oil-and-gas sector (Government 25 PROTECT AND INVEST in people INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance of Canada 2021). In Cambodia, US$64 million has 2.3 Strengthening Service been allocated for wage subsidies and skill training for suspended workers in the garment and the tourism Delivery Systems industries. In partnership with the private sector, governments Meanwhile, the Human Resource Development can reimagine service delivery systems in a digital Council of Mauritius plans to increase their National world, integrating them to work best for people Training and Reskilling Intake program by across the service delivery spectrum. This would approximately 9,000 unemployed people for the involve building digital infrastructure and strengthening construction, manufacturing, logistics, Information and institutions for preparedness, coordination, financing, Communication Technology/Business Process and service delivery. Key areas for systems strengthening Outsourcing (ICT-BPO), agroindustry, renewable include health systems for pandemic preparedness energy, and circular economies. Beneficiaries are paid with integrated and people-centered primary health monthly stipends of Rs 10,200 (approximately care systems, education service delivery that does not US$250) over a training period spanning six months leave disadvantaged children behind, and social (De La Flor et al. 2021). protection and labor systems that can adapt nimbly to changing needs. Women’s economic empowerment can contribute to sustainable recovery. Women’s economic Harnessing technology for service delivery empowerment, in conjunction with girls’ education, The integration of services and interoperable, linked family planning, and reproductive and sexual health, digital and disruptive technology services can help can facilitate the transition to low-carbon economies, maximize the benefit of complementary, multisector help improve resource use, and assist in lowering actions. Data and digital technologies can help environmental damage and land fragmentation. A governments develop a more nuanced understanding focus on women in decision-making and leadership of the different populations they serve, provide new roles, as well as on the type of skills training, services (for example, digital therapeutics for mental employment creation, and entrepreneurship finance health) and transform the way in which existing human needed by the green economy, can help countries capital-related services are delivered. Data and digital avoid recreating the patterns of occupational technologies can be empowering by putting the segregation that characterize fossil-fuel-dependent people, families, and communities at the core of, and sectors. New jobs and livelihoods in energy, transport, in charge of, their own human capital formation and and agriculture can equalize opportunities. protection. For example, in Uzbekistan the government connected the databases of more than 20 ministries The expansion of childcare worldwide to meet current and agencies to create a single social registry for needs could create 43 million new jobs (Devercelli efficient household targeting. Brazil similarly created and Beaton-Day 2020) and thereby facilitate women’s the integrated digital platform SineSaúde (National employment. Efforts to eliminate gender discriminatory Employment System-Health) to promote and facilitate laws and regulations can enhance the business the hiring of professionals to improve health-service environment for female entrepreneurs, as recently delivery during and following the pandemic seen in Jordan (prohibiting gender-based (Government of Brazil 2020). discrimination in financial services), Pakistan (allowing women to register businesses in the same way as The adoption of technologies to strengthen service men), and Senegal (enacting new legislation that delivery will be possible only with substantial directly prohibits gender-based discrimination in investments. Much of the needed digital infrastructure employment) (World Bank 2021g). and technology could be developed by the private sector or through partnerships between governments The foregoing are examples of steps and initiatives, and the private sector, especially if market-opening typically short- to medium-term, launched by various and growth-enabling reforms are undertaken. Yet the countries to help restore human capital in response to public sector has a crucial role in closing access and the coronavirus crisis. However, to enable the targeted usage gaps. For example, in some remote or rural recipients to avail themselves of the benefits of these areas where operations are not commercially viable, initiatives, service delivery systems need to be created, governments can subsidize poor households to rethought, or improved. We now turn to these. purchase devices or subscribe to internet services. PROTECT AND INVEST in people 26 Chapter 2: PUBLIC SPENDING TO BUILD, PROTECT AND UTILIZE HUMAN CAPITAL Public support can also help people develop digital US$0.50 and US$2.00 per person per year. The competencies. Public investments need to incorporate COVID-19 experience may encourage countries to market-based elements to minimize market distortions view pandemic preparedness as an essential part of by, for example, ensuring that sectoral rules promote health system development and routine planning and competition, strengthening state-aid control budgeting exercises. frameworks, promoting the competitive selection of private partners, and ensuring that consumers have If current measures are sustained, many countries the right to choose better services over inferior ones. will emerge from the pandemic with health systems better prepared to withstand shocks. On the financing Public policies need to establish digital safeguards. side, pre-pandemic investments in mechanisms that Digital safeguards include measures for cybersecurity limit the likelihood or scale of shocks, in access to and data privacy and protection, which build trust in contingency and emergency funding, and in solutions digital systems, processes, and data. It is also critical to fiscal rigidities have proven important for the to ensure that people—especially the elderly, rural response. On the service delivery side, countries fared populations, or persons with disabilities—are not better in those cases where their governments had inadvertently excluded from or compromised in the prior experience in engaging the private sector. For effort to make digital opportunities available to example, the response in the Democratic Republic of develop human capital. Congo benefited from a long-standing working relationship with a set of certified, trusted suppliers to These safeguards become more important as ensure the delivery of medical supplies, including test advanced technologies, such as artificial intelligence, kits. During the pandemic, many countries intensified are used to inform employment or public service their engagement of the private sector, which, if delivery and hence should operate in a transparent, sustained, will provide critical surge capacity for future nondiscriminatory, and ethical manner (Manyika, shocks. For example, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Silberg and Presten 2019). This is especially relevant Nigeria changed licensing and accreditation rules, and for countries such as Paraguay, Colombia, Togo, Côte Nepal introduced quality standards for private d'Ivoire, Niger and other countries where the delivery laboratories. Indonesia, Lao PDR, Nepal, and Tajikistan of cash transfers through electronic payment, mobile introduced new payment modalities or adjusted money, and digital wallets became common during existing ones for private sector providers. the pandemic. Resilient health systems and universal health Strong institutions for efficiency and accountability, coverage require fit-for-purpose primary health along with robust regulations, are critical for care equipped with financial and human resource technological and other innovations aimed at surge capacities to respond to unexpected shocks. improving service delivery. As further discussed in They must meet the full range of local health needs, Chapter 3, incentives for, and the accountability of, both including the priority services discussed earlier to policy makers and service providers matter for results restore health. They require multidisciplinary teams (World Bank 2003). While the use of technologies engaged in local surveillance and outreach activities. facilitates service delivery by reducing the costs of Such systems coordinate patients’ movements logistics and information and aiding certain through the health system, build trust-based accountability arrangements, it is not a full substitute relationships, and hold themselves accountable for for robust institutions (World Bank 2016b). the health outcomes of local communities. Strengthening health systems Fit-for-purpose primary health care requires adequate and preparedness financing combined with some local decision As COVID-19 has demonstrated, sound pandemic autonomy over prioritization and spending decisions. preparedness and response is a necessity in For example, Burkina Faso and Cambodia expanded building resilient economies. An assessment of their networks of primary health care facilities. pandemic preparedness and response capacity in Rwanda, Nepal, Malawi, and Ethiopia complemented 49 LICs conducted after the 2013–2016 Ebola an increase in the number of training institutions for outbreak identified more than 5,000 critical capacity core health workers with the deployment of gaps (World Bank 2019). The investments required to community or health extension workers. Thailand and fill these gaps, it is estimated, amounted to between Turkey created strong incentives for health workers 27 PROTECT AND INVEST in people INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance to practice in underserviced areas. Brazil introduced Financing and accountability mechanisms that multidisciplinary teams. China and Kazakhstan are emphasize improvements in learning outcomes can using telemedicine to expand the variety of conditions help accelerate countries’ learning trajectories. The to be managed in primary health care settings. India State of Ceará in Brazil, for example, introduced a and Ghana are strengthening their disease funding formula to incentivize municipal governments surveillance and related capacities. India is also to improve learning outcomes. Coupled with technical upgrading its infectious disease hospitals and a assistance and penalties to municipalities with a network of high-containment biosafety laboratories. higher incidence of students below basic levels of Ghana is increasing its coverage of vaccinations, performance, the scheme has achieved remarkable including for climate-sensitive diseases, and raising results over the course of a decade without significant awareness about critical prevention measures. Saudi increases in public spending in education. Based on Arabia adopted a digital patient “journey map” the successful experience of Ceará, the federal encompassing digital applications for vaccination, congress passed legislation in 2020 to scale up this digital confirmation of eligibility for vaccination, approach to the other states (Lautharte, de Oliveira immunity certification protocol, and monitoring. and Loureiro 2021). Competitively awarded school grants have also been linked to improvements in Building resilient education service delivery student-learning outcomes in other countries, Education systems that ensure that learning can including Indonesia and Senegal (Al-Samarrai et al. happen anywhere will be more resilient to future 2021; Carneiro et al. 2016). crises. Building such systems requires expanding accessible digital learning platforms at schools, and Strengthening social protection investing in information systems to track the and labor market systems enrollment and retention of at-risk students and to Increasing social protection coverage, engage citizens. In a resilient system, teachers need responsiveness and adaptability will facilitate to know how to employ distance-learning platforms resilient, inclusive and green recovery. Adaptive and tools to reach students in their households. In social protection systems can bolster poor and Egypt, a wide-reaching education reform that vulnerable households’ and communities’ resilience preceded the COVID-19 pandemic helped expand to shocks and can prevent nonpoor households from e-learning content to all basic education, strengthened falling into poverty. An adaptive social protection e-assessment, and provided online teacher training, system can dynamically identify people in need of thus making the country’s education system better assistance and adjust coverage and benefits in prepared to deliver remote learning during a crisis. In response to changing needs and shocks. Coupled Jordan and Turkey, the development of TV and digital with economic-inclusion and employment programs, content for blended teaching and learning, combined it can also advance women’s economic empowerment, with psychosocial counseling and remedial courses, facilitate the transition away from fossil fuels, and help will help reduce interruptions to the educational prevent habitat degradation (Bowen et al. 2020). For process in a future crisis (Gatti et al. 2021 World Bank example, Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Program 2020i). Similarly, in Guyana, a television channel for uses public works in drought-prone areas to support learning at home was expanded and new radio investments in soil and water conservation and content was created to reach those without easy rangeland-management activities, which have media access (Akeasha Boodie 2020). reduced household vulnerability and improved carbon sequestration and soil fertility. Similarly, a Education financing mechanisms can mitigate program in Bhutan is providing cash for work in the inequality and improve efficiency. While public tourism sector to provide support to individuals whose investment in education remains inadequate in many economic activity has been hit the hardest in the LICs and MICs, countries at all levels of economic pandemic (Rinzin 2020). development struggle to translate public spending into education results. Many countries have covered all or Social protection can also help build social cohesion part of the school fees for the most vulnerable in an and informal risk sharing in communities. Additionally, effort to prevent students from dropping out of school. social protection programs have known impacts on For example, in Azerbaijan, 50 percent of tuition fees human capital outcomes—supporting access to health for students from vulnerable families were paid from services for children, higher rates of school enrollment, the state budget during 2020 (ILO 2020). progression and completion, better mental health, PROTECT AND INVEST in people 28 Chapter 2: PUBLIC SPENDING TO BUILD, PROTECT AND UTILIZE HUMAN CAPITAL and lower engagement in risky behaviors—all of the 18 million families targeted for emergency cash elements important for the inclusion agenda. transfers during the pandemic. The government thus accelerated the rollout of its digital national ID system The expansion of social protection coverage in as a basis for expanding financial inclusion, organizing response to COVID-19 calls for further system vaccine distribution, and launching future cash- strengthening. Relative to pre-pandemic levels, cash transfer operations. Afghanistan, in response to transfer benefits nearly doubled between 2019 and climate-related disasters, is investing in an early- 2020, and coverage grew by 240 percent, on average, warning system and in the activation of social in 41 countries included in an analysis (Gentilini, Almenfi protection responses such as cash or food transfers and Dale 2020). Countries with robust social protection and emergency public works interventions in affected systems, such as those with low levels of labor market areas. Honduras has created a fund for the Plan for informality and with a strong unemployment insurance Solidarity Promotion and Reciprocal Assistance (PLAN system, have been in a better position to respond to PRO-SOLIDAR) to facilitate access to essential COVID-19. However, pre-pandemic systems in most services and cash transfers to people in vulnerable countries were largely inadequate, with half of the conditions (De La Flor et al. 2021). In Ukraine, the global population without coverage. Retrenchment government introduced an e-service online platform from the COVID-19 response could again leave many to enable remote registration and remote enrollment unprotected. in social assistance programs (Olena Tarasiuk 2021). Improved inclusion depends on expanding coverage More ambitious reforms could overcome the of basic social assistance, finding ways to cover the segmentation between employment-based social informal sector with insurance (possibly via a mix of insurance and targeted social assistance transfers that subsidized premiums and voluntary savings schemes), often leave a large “missing middle” of largely informal and, where possible, moving from severance pay to sector workers without coverage. These solutions are unemployment insurance for the formal sector (Gentilini, also contingent on ensuring adequate, sustainable Almenfi and Dale 2020). In Georgia, unemployment financing (Gentilini, Almenfi and Dale 2020). benefits have been expanded to cover all formal wage Digital technology, skills and regulations for digital workers who lost their jobs owing to the negative jobs can boost labor market resilience. Many impact of COVID-19, and a one-off benefit to cover self- governments have started to regulate alternate work employed and informal workers has been put in place arrangements to adjust to the new reality. For to counter the economic downturn (ILO 2020). example, the Government of Bolivia introduced telework into the labor code. In Mozambique, the Building an adaptive social protection system government proposed flexible work schemes for requires government investment in digital companies and the public administration to allow infrastructure as well as program coordination and them to implement teleworking schemes and avoid responsiveness. An efficient, adaptive social protection excessive social contact. The Government of Turkey system relies on robust service delivery systems also urges the private sector to make use of flexible including foundational identification, population work arrangements. In China, the government is registers and digital payment systems to respond to a supporting digital platforms to promote employment range of shocks. In Brazil, the government launched an and alleviate poverty. online platform to identify individuals who were not initially included in the national social registry. India used In the medium- to long-term, investments in digital its Aadhar foundational identification platform, which capacity, skills, as well as appropriate regulations for reaches 1.3 billion people, to scale up cash transfers, platform firms and workers should be a global priority. with a strong focus on digital payments. India is also Companies will invest more in their ability to conduct strengthening fiber-optic investments as part of a business over the internet to be more resilient to recovery plan. potential lockdowns. Governments have a key role to play to ensure that digital technology serves all and Social protection systems need to be dynamic, to overcome the digital gender gap as well as the ensuring timely and adequate responses. The exclusion of poor communities and households Philippines, already known for well-targeted (GSMA 2020). conditional cash transfers and a strong social registry, still faced challenges in identifying and reaching many 29 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 3: GOVERNANCE TO TRANSLATE FISCAL POLICIES INTO HUMAN CAPITAL OUTCOMES CHAPTER 3: GOVERNANCE TO TRANSLATE FISCAL POLICIES INTO HUMAN CAPITAL OUTCOMES KEY MESSAGES • Achieving human capital outcomes requires policy prioritization, strong coordination across ministries, agencies, and jurisdictions, and an emphasis on evidence-based policymaking. This has been evident especially during the COVID-19 pandemic and will also be the key to recovery. • The management of government budgets and human resources can benefit from an outcome orientation, with an emphasis on accountability for results, facilitated by digital technologies. • Governments can renew the social contract around human capital, restoring the trust of citizens through greater transparency and opportunities for citizen participation in policymaking and resource allocation. C lose policy and resource coordination capital of senior government leaders. It entails close among key ministries, agencies and levels of policy and resource coordination to avoid duplication government is required to ensure a strategic and to maximize synergy across government and programmatic approach to human capital. agencies, sectors and levels of government. Countries also need to sharpen decision-making Evidenced-based policymaking and implementation around explicit outcome orientations in both allocating would facilitate prioritization and accountability for and managing public financial resources. Improving results. This whole-of-government approach has been the motivation and productivity of the workforce essential for effective management of the COVID-19 involved in service delivery, with increased reliance on pandemic. In the Republic of Korea, Singapore, advancing technologies, is also a primary determinant and Taiwan, Province of China, for example, crisis of the quality of human capital outcomes. Improved response units at the center of government led a financial and human resource management should coordinated response, drawing on comprehensive be backed up with a data-driven, evidence-based real-time information. Such an approach will also be approach, enhanced transparency and accountability vital for countries to manage the restoration of human to gain citizens’ trust, and a monitoring and evaluation capital and for a green and resilient recovery because (M&E) mechanism to track measurable improvements combating climate change is a similar multisectoral in human capital outcomes. and multijurisdictional challenge. Driving results from the center of government will require strategic prioritization and evidence-based 3.1 Whole-of-Government policymaking in those priority areas. While choosing Prioritization of Human Capital which policies to pursue and which not is ultimately a political decision, making these trade-offs can be Prioritizing human capital in a resource-constrained aided by evidence-based decision-making. In some environment requires a whole-of-government countries, such prioritization is done through formal approach to policymaking and implementation. delivery units typically focused on a few national Such an approach is predicated on an explicit policies. In others, this is done through dedicated political commitment to pursuing a specific set of performance-tracking routines within the chief policy objectives as priorities. Selectivity is key given executive’s office. Malaysia’s Performance the high administrative transaction cost inherent in Management & Delivery Unit (PEMANDU) is a this approach and, more important, the finite political prominent example of the former, while Pakistan 31 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 3: GOVERNANCE TO TRANSLATE FISCAL POLICIES INTO HUMAN CAPITAL OUTCOMES Punjab’s education-monitoring system under the Second, better use can be made of limited resources provincial chief minister is an example of the latter. by sharing resources and avoiding duplication What these approaches share is focusing political between different ministerial budgets. For example, pressure on the main government priorities, to address the urgent need for surge capacity during establishing an integrated monitoring mechanism, the pandemic, Belgium and Estonia redeployed using data to drive analysis, consensus building, government staff from nonessential to essential monitoring and decision making, and providing a clear functions, which required collaboration between signal that government is holding ministers and senior several ministries (OECD 2020). Many countries have staff to account for delivering on these priorities. also been implementing “one-stop-shop” and “shared services” models in which front offices for multiple The Punjab monitoring system was key to the chief government services are co-located, and back-office minister’s ability to drive reforms and helped improve and administrative functions are pooled and school inputs and expenditure efficiency (Das 2013). centralized to achieve cost savings and efficiency Most countries have management information systems gains. Finally, policy implementation can be improved for education, health, and social welfare services; but through regular tracking of the achievement of challenges to interoperability and limited management interagency goals and resolving bottlenecks in policy capacity often mean that the potential for these implementation. systems to inform human capital policies is underutilized. To build and sustain broad political Improved coordination is even more important in support for reforms, countries such as Cameroon, the federal systems in which policy functions relevant Democratic Republic of Congo, and the Kyrgyz for human capital are a shared responsibility Republic have effectively used a policy dashboard that between central and subnational jurisdictions. In synthesizes outcome, output, and input data in an theory, subnational governments are often better integrated manner for decision making and placed to deliver social services because of their implementation monitoring and, equally importantly, to proximity to citizens. However, decentralized service communicate to citizens.1 delivery is institutionally more complex and requires clarity of mandates, clear lines of accountability, and Implementing these strategic priorities requires effective resource sharing across the different tiers close policy and resource coordination across of government. At the same time, capacities for and ministries. While the institutional forms may vary commitments to improving a given policy outcome, from country to country, the functions that these including human capital, often vary considerably coordination mechanisms need to fulfill are among subnational jurisdictions. These variations generally threefold (Pollitt 2003). First, the often lead to wide disparities in outcomes. Reforms effectiveness of policymaking for multisectoral to intergovernmental relations are complicated, long- objectives such as human capital depends on term and often mired in political economy maximizing the synergies and eliminating the complexities. However, as a practical immediate step, contradictions between different policies. For governments can review the de jure responsibilities example, policies to address shortages of rural health of the different tiers of government to check if there workers—a major problem in many LICs and MICs— is clarity on the core functions necessary for service likely need actions by organizations beyond the delivery, and whether there is a shared understanding ministry of health. For example, the ministry of of these different responsibilities among the key education may need to prioritize enrolling medical actors. Often, confusion on which department is students from rural areas; the ministry of infrastructure responsible for what can hurt policy implementation. may need to provide subsidized public housing for For example, in four countries in Latin America, local health workers; a ministry or an agency in charge of education officials failed to correctly identify between government-wide personnel policy may need to 10 and 80 percent of tasks specified for them in authorize additional positions and recruitments; and legislation, and incorrectly claimed to have the ministry of finance may need to authorize the responsibility for 15 to 35 percent of the tasks required additional budget—and possibly provide allocated to other jurisdictions (Adelman et al. financial incentives—for health workers to serve in forthcoming). remote locations (WHO 2010). PROTECT AND INVEST in people 32 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance Whole-of-government prioritization of human Weak alignment between the budget, the needs of capital ultimately relies on the incentives and the sector, and frontline service providers capacities of a vast set of actors through the entire undermines achievement of desired human capital service delivery chain. Leaders, however, do matter goals. During budget formulation, line ministries often and investments in improved coordination structures struggle to produce good-quality budget proposals or better data systems will not have an impact if policy because of limited costing capabilities and credible makers are not aligned toward improving human information about the needs of the sector. capital. Both political and bureaucratic leadership is Furthermore, the complexities of matching budgets essential. In Peru, political leaders used the shock that require input-based line items to specific sector value of high stunting and poor results in the results can be challenging for line ministries (WHO Programme for International Student Assessment 2018). The limited involvement of frontline service (PISA) to mobilize broad support from the public, the providers in the planning and budgeting of business community, and parents for reforms to devise expenditures also exacerbates the misalignment of a multisectoral strategy against malnutrition (2008–16) the needs of the frontline and the budget allocation. and strengthen teacher accountability (2009–15) In turn, lack of financial autonomy of frontline spending (World Bank 2018d). units effectively makes it all but impossible for the frontline managers to adjust the approved budget to Politicians also need this goal alignment toward human the ground reality. capital from the senior bureaucrats who are responsible for day-to-day policy implementation. One Effective expenditure prioritization requires sound approach to ensure this alignment is to tie the decision-making processes that reconcile the cost individual performance goals of senior civil servants of delivering policy objectives with available to high-level political priorities, and to hold these resources. Countries with severely limited fiscal senior civil servants accountable for the achievement space would be forced to pursue a limited set of of these targets through greater reliance on priorities with a limited range of measures, alongside performance pay and public accountability. A good the rationalization of existing expenditure. In all example is Rwanda, which used a precolonial tradition countries, improving the allocative efficiency of of public accountability called Imihigo as a basis for a available resources toward human capital outcomes performance-contracting system for mayors and will demand systematic elaboration of how human ministries (Beschel et al. 2018b). The key is to be capital policy objectives can be achieved (strategy), strategic in the selection of these goals, including the associated institutional responsibilities, and those that involve cross-agency collaboration, to avoid costing of the associated interventions. Any increases information overload and taxing limited capacity. in expenditure will need to be financed, and there may be trade-offs with other planned expenditures. Often, there is significant scope for efficiency gains within existing human capital expenditure allocations— 3.2 Managing Public Finances for example, sometimes budgets are allocated but not for Results fully utilized due to implementation bottlenecks. It is important that these are found before looking for Given the fiscal constraints governments face, it is financing outside human capital sectors. critical that the public financial management (PFM) system be responsive to clearly defined human Ultimately, budgetary decisions are political, yet capital outcomes. PFM systems are meant to create they can be better informed through systems and an enabling environment for the effective funding of procedures for evidence-based budget decision activities and programs that deliver policy objectives, making. To move toward a more outcome-focused ensure adequate and sustainable funding of key policy budget, some countries have introduced performance priorities, and create a predictable and timely flow of measures and targets into budgeting as a mechanism funds to facilitate efficient service delivery (Barroy et for informing allocation decisions according to the al. 2018). In practice, however, many countries face results they are intended to achieve. This is various PFM challenges that make it difficult for complemented by strong monitoring and a practice of budgets to reflect the needs of the sector and/or for holding implementers accountable for results. Such the system to enable efficient service delivery. budget decision making, however, requires robust data 33 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 3: GOVERNANCE TO TRANSLATE FISCAL POLICIES INTO HUMAN CAPITAL OUTCOMES and can benefit from program evaluations (providing also important to ensure sound accounting for inputs evidence of whether a program is working) and before accounting for outcomes, which requires a spending reviews (assessing the value of public strong foundation of PFM basics. Furthermore, there spending) (Moynihan and Beazley 2016). Use of a is often a lack of necessary outcome data to inform program classification can facilitate an outcome focus program budgeting; the data are either not collected by more intuitively connecting allocation to outputs and or collected too infrequently to make such a budgeting outcomes. When implemented with genuine political instrument meaningful. will and a focus on achieving a small number of high- priority results, these techniques can have significant Several examples inform the way in which public impact, as the case of Peru illustrates (box 3.1). spending aimed at achieving human capital objectives can be prioritized. One example is the However, outcome-oriented budgeting is technically pro-poor budgeting that accompanied the Poverty demanding, and some countries have struggled to Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) during the Heavily use these budgeting techniques to achieve tangible Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) Initiative launched in improvements in budget outcomes. Both program 1996 by the IMF and the World Bank Group. In this budgeting and results-based budgeting can be case, debt relief in the LICs was linked to the counterproductive, resulting in overly technocratic prioritization of poverty-reducing expenditures. procedures and a proliferation of performance targets Another example is gender-based budgeting (UNIFEM that distract attention from the ultimate outcome. It is and UNFPA, 2010). In both cases, a detailed BOX 3.1: BUDGETING FOR RESULTS IN PERU: AN OUTCOME-ORIENTED, MULTISECTORAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING A notable example of an explicit approach to on two vaccines deemed to have the largest multisectoral budgeting with a clear outcome impact on reducing chronic malnutrition based focus that yielded tangible results is Peru’s on the disease burden in Peru and international success in using its “budgeting for results”— evidence. Other priority interventions included PpR for short in Spanish—to tackle stunting. improvements in the quality of preventive health A succession of four governments placed a and nutrition services at the facility level, reducing high priority on stunting reduction as a national iron deficiency among pregnant women and policy goal, mobilized multiple actors at both young children, and conditional cash transfers the national and the regional and local levels, to incentivize household demand for these and allocated budgetary resources to pre- services. Regional and local governments that identified high-priority interventions. The result managed frontline health facilities were given was remarkable. In less than a decade, Peru a financial incentive for increasing the supply managed to reduce the stunting rate from of nutrition-related services (Marini et al. 2017). around 28 percent in 2008 to 13 percent in 2016. PpR’s coverage has been limited to a portion Peru introduced PpR in 2008 to prioritize of the government budget, initially covering budgetary allocations and to focus results on only 5 high-priority budgetary programs, and five selected policy priorities, including nutrition then expanding to 24 programs accounting for and maternal and child health. Under the 14 percent of the total budget (IMF 2015). The stewardship of the Ministry of Economy and coverage continued to expand and reached Finance (MEF), relevant interventions for the around 50 percent of the health sector budget Articulated Nutrition Budget Program (PAN) were by 2019 (WHO 2020). It is possible that the identified and prioritized based on a rigorous limited application to a small number of truly review of available scientific evidence. For high-priority outcomes facilitated greater example, Peru chose to concentrate resources strategic focus of both resources and the political Source: Marini et al. 2017 attention to achieve the stated policy outcome. PROTECT AND INVEST in people 34 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance examination of existing budget classifications is A medium-term framework can be instrumental in required to identify those items most likely associated ensuring the predictability and adequacy of budget with a given outcome across all relevant spending allocations to policy priorities, including human units. Although the absence of a program classification capital priorities. Traditionally, medium-term fiscal complicates the task, it is still possible to identify a frameworks (MTFFs) and medium-term expenditure bundle of relevant expenditures by following the frameworks (MTEF) have been promoted as tools to example of nutrition expenditure reviews (see, for reconcile the cost of achieving human capital and example, box 3.2). other policy priorities with sustainable macro-fiscal objectives (Marquez and Moreno-Dodson 2013). Human capital can be prioritized in fiscal rules that However, often countries have shown that govern the budgeting process. Fiscal rules can take implementing MTFFs/MTEFs is challenging because the form of hard numerical limits on aggregates (often the overriding incentive of the budget process is to with escape clauses), setting boundaries on focus on the forthcoming budget year (Choi and Park expenditures that cannot be frequently changed, which 2013). A medium-term estimate of the cost of achieving during times of austerity can help ensure that human human capital objectives still has the potential to capital-related expenditures are maintained (Reeves et inform annual spending decisions, but only a few al. 2014). However, such fiscal rules may restrict countries have managed to develop MTFFS/MTEFs as government’s capacity to respond to new priorities and reliable tools to secure funding for policy priorities needs. Fiscal rules can also be softer and specify clear beyond an immediate financial year. If implemented policy intentions and transparency. Clearer policy well, medium-term frameworks could be extremely intentions related to human capital, reflected in important for financially constrained countries in need medium-term expenditure commitments, can help line of international support (IMF 2021a). ministries to make policy-informed spending decisions over a period, and help ministries of finance better A challenge to the prioritization of human capital is understand the medium-term implications for fiscal that infrastructure spending can be politically more policy targets, including human capital investments for attractive than operational spending. Capital overall fiscal targets. Independent fiscal councils, which spending on physical infrastructure, whether within are increasingly common, can play a crucial role in the social sectors or other sectors, is more visible and thus oversight and monitoring of government’s compliance more politically attractive. This can result in with fiscal rules, including expenditure commitments infrastructure that leads to allocative inefficiencies, in associated with human capital policy intentions the form of either underfunding of the social sectors (Cangiano et al. 2013). or accumulation of physical capital which cannot be adequately maintained or sustained. This challenge is BOX 3.2: NUTRITION-SPECIFIC AND NUTRITION-SENSITIVE INTERVENTIONS AND NUTRITION EXPENDITURE REVIEWS The Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) Movement including making nutritious food accessible to attempts to identify expenditures that are all, clean water and sanitation, and maternal and conducive to achieving nutrition outcomes as child healthcare—that are labeled as “nutrition- either “nutrition-specific” or “nutrition-sensitive” sensitive.” For each of these interventions, it is (Ruel, Alderman, and the Maternal and Child possible to identify related expenditure items, Nutrition Study Group 2013). Interventions although in many instances this identification explicitly intended to improve nutrition may need to be proximate depending on outcomes—such as support for exclusive breast- the level of detail captured in the budget feeding, food fortification, and micronutrient classification system. A similar approach has supplementation—are “nutrition-specific.” been proposed to identify expenditures relevant There is a range of complementary measures— for climate change policies (Bird et al. 2012). Source: SUN (2020); UNDP/ODI (2012) 35 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 3: GOVERNANCE TO TRANSLATE FISCAL POLICIES INTO HUMAN CAPITAL OUTCOMES further exacerbated by the fact that education and In short, the human capital approach challenges those health are, by their nature, labor-intensive services, traditional boundaries between capital and current and by the fact that teacher and health worker pay is expenditures in budgeting (see box 3.3). This approach often politicized. Sector expenditure can subsequently would reorient policy choices toward identifying and be dominated by the cost of human resources and prioritizing specific categories of current spending that capital spending, which squeezes the operational contribute to the accumulation of human capital, given inputs required to run good-quality services and how crucial it is for long-term economic and social maintain sector infrastructure. development (Lange, Wodon and Carey 2018).3 Another challenge is that the current concepts and Once the budget is aligned to address selected practices of PFM do not identify the development human capital outcomes as priorities and adequate of human resources as an investment in the resources are allocated to achieve them, the PFM accumulation of human capital. Human capital does system needs to deliver reliable resources and not exist as a category for public finance. For the PFM facilitate efficient expenditure to local end-users. frameworks followed by ministries of finance, much of Bottlenecks to the smooth and speedy social spending is considered as Current Spending implementation of the budget include delayed and (wages & salaries, goods & services, and unpredictable releases of the approved budget to maintenance), more akin to consumption. Hence, spending units, cumbersome procurement, and regardless of the development return on this Current delays in payments to service providers or Spending, it is not viewed as investment and is contractors, sometimes resulting in arrears. This can considered less productive than the Capital Spending lead to work stoppage and incomplete delivery of on infrastructure. Capital Spending is identified with contracted goods and services. Other bottlenecks to all expenditures that lead to the accumulation of be addressed include difficulties in implementing physical fixed assets and equipment. virements, fragmentation of cash balances in the BOX 3.3: HOW HUMAN CAPITAL ACCUMULATION CHALLENGES THE BOUNDARY BETWEEN CURRENT AND CAPITAL EXPENDITURES Under the current fiscal accounting frameworks expenditures identified as leading to “human followed by ministries of finance, much of social capital accumulation”, the salary and wages spending is classified as current spending component as well as associated operating and considered less productive and of lower expenses could be considered as part of a priority than capital spending. Capturing the “human capital spending” envelope. Indeed, for accumulation of human capital is difficult under a road project, the salaries and wages paid to this dichotomy that shapes the guiding principles workers are part of the overall “capital spending of fiscal accounting. The dichotomy has practical envelope” that leads to the “accumulation of implications for both annual budgeting and physical assets”—roads. multiyear planning through MTFFs/MTEFs. Deciding which lines of expenditures, within social To draw parallels between the accumulation sectors and beyond, would contribute to “human and preservation of human capital and the capital accumulation”, should follow standardized accumulation and preservation of physical norms. This can be the case of primary care, capital may require new guiding principles vaccination, and nutrition, or primary education. following a revised distinction between “current The new thinking and norms may encompass expenditures” and “capital expenditures”. adaptation of the Government Finance Statistics Such a revision would be in line with both the Manual and budget classifications to incorporate human capital approach and IMF’s strategy for the concept of human capital investment into the engagement on social spending. Hence, for concepts and practices of fiscal accounting. Source: World Bank Staff PROTECT AND INVEST in people 36 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance absence of a treasury single account, and cash Supportive arrangements for facilitating budget rationing practices in ministries of finance. execution in a decentralized environment where Weaknesses in reporting on expenditure utilization autonomous subnational governments play a key and output delivery compound the problem because role are both more complex and less amenable to this often leads to further tightening of ex ante control r e l a t i v e l y s i m p l e a d m i n i s t r a t i v e f i xe s . at the expense of agility and flexibility. Intergovernmental fiscal frameworks need to promote and provide adequate resources for the achievement Promptly identifying, understanding and removing of national human capital objectives, while providing these bottlenecks requires high-level attention and autonomy for subnational governments to deliver commitment because, often, these problems arise services in line with their own needs and priorities. from bureaucratic inertia and unnecessarily complex Clarity in the roles and functions of different levels of rules and procedures. A wholesale reform of budget government in the pursuit of objectives, and how execution procedures is usually unrealistic and often services are to be financed, is important but often unnecessary. The objective can and should be limited challenging to achieve, given the tensions that to improving execution performance of selected typically exist between levels of government. priority programs and services. Similarly, across-the- board relaxation of existing control measures is not A predictable flow of intergovernmental transfers is recommended when internal controls are weak and critical, inasmuch as the subnational governments the corruption risks are high. depend on these for service delivery, as is usually the case in highly decentralized systems in the LICs and The extent to which a degree of flexibility can be MICs. For example, Mozambique was concerned about introduced for “de-bottlenecking” for specific poor education outcomes and the timeliness of the expenditures depends on the existing legal and disbursement of school fund grants to primary schools. regulatory frameworks that govern budgeting and Through a reform program supported by the World financial management. In some cases, it is indeed Bank in 2014 (Saleem 2016), a high number of schools possible to find relatively simple fixes. For example, received timely school grants for the first time in 2016 over the 2014–2016 period, Pakistan’s Ministry of and found a positive correlation between access to Finance introduced a minor change in the procedure basic materials and learning outcomes. for releasing the approved budget for the government’s flagship cash-transfer program, Conditional grants can be one mechanism to Benazir Income Support Program (BISP). The result encourage subnational governments to achieve was a drastic improvement in funds flow and an national objectives through providing additional increase in the number of eligible households who fiscal space for that purpose. While conditional grants received full benefit installments in a given year. are not always tied to outcomes, performance grants Other types of bottlenecks, however, especially can be used to incentivize the performance of local those related to procurement, could prove to be governments, while payments to frontline providers more difficult to remove. linked to the services they provide have the potential to incentivize improved delivery of high-quality Digital systems can complement these regulatory services. This depends on reliable data and, where reforms to improve budget execution. Treasury possible, third-party verification of those results. single accounts, supported by financial management However, again, it is important that incentives are information systems, can help improve budget carefully targeted otherwise they become diffused. credibility and timely payments to service providers Successful examples include the case of the State of and contractors. E-procurement, through greater Ceará in Brazil mentioned in Chapter 2. Similarly, transparency and audit trails, can reduce corruption India’s Finance Commission has recommended that a and lead to budgetary savings and improved part of grants to states be tied to the achievement of outcomes (Lewis-Faupel et al. 2016). Digital registration, certain student learning outcomes and improvements authentication, and payment can reduce leakages in in equity (Fifteenth Finance Commission of India 2020). social welfare programs and empower women and marginalized groups, as evidenced in India, Niger, Reliable, relevant and timely financial and Pakistan, and South Africa (World Bank 2016b). performance information is more important than 37 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 3: GOVERNANCE TO TRANSLATE FISCAL POLICIES INTO HUMAN CAPITAL OUTCOMES ever during COVID-19, when policy makers need to the government wage bill.5 These workers generally make decisions under significant uncertainty. Digital earn, on average, a wage premium over private sector management information systems can provide the workers of similar age and skills, but this relatively high granular, real-time information on budgets and pay is only weakly tied to individual performance performance that is needed for informed decision because teachers and health workers are usually civil making, flexible and agile budget execution, and servants with job protection and automatic pay budget transparency. Furthermore, making the reports increases based on years of service. Furthermore, publicly available in ways in which citizens can easily they are frequently well organized (unionized) and understand the spending and the results can politically influential, and form an important group in strengthen oversight, improve policy choices, and reform dynamics, sometimes to the detriment of ensure accountability. Digital management information improving workforce accountability and productivity. systems make budget transparency easier; countries with more advanced systems have greater budget Improving the productivity of the public sector transparency as measured by the Open Budget Index workforce is primarily a management reform that (World Bank 2016b). The challenge is that many entails selecting individuals that are committed to countries currently face such tight constraints from the serving the public and keeping them motivated and pandemic and from limited prior investment in accountable on their jobs. In too many LICs and MICs, appropriate technology that they cannot ensure such unfortunately, selection of these essential workers is timely and reliable reporting (World Bank 2020c). done based on political affiliation or nepotism rather than merit. There is usually a surge in hiring following As an integral part of decision making and elections, and selection is done though highly accountability, a robust M&E framework is needed to discretionary and subjective means. As a result of this, monitor progress of human capital. An effective M&E for example, a decade ago in Mexico, reforms meant framework that includes an evidence-based theory of to improve the merit-based selection of teachers change or results framework would aim to evaluate the through assessments based on a competency effectiveness of the budget against defined human examination were opposed by the country’s politically capital outcome targets. It could help to strengthen the powerful teachers’ union (World Bank 2018d). In India, performance of human capital programs by clarifying in 2013, an independent probe uncovered a objectives and costs, identifying shortcomings in the multibillion-dollar scheme of bribery and cheating process, and demonstrating how well the program involving politicians and bureaucrats that enabled achieved its objectives and used its resources (OECD unqualified candidates to gain admission to medical 2019). M&E frameworks could also support governments schools. Merit-based recruitment of teachers based in readjusting priorities as challenges evolve. on a publicly advertised call for applications, and a rigorous test to screen the most qualified candidates, is a high-priority reform that can improve the quality of 3.3 Results-Oriented Workforce service delivery and human capital outcomes. Management The quality of management is also associated with Education, health, and nutrition services are labor higher levels of worker motivation and higher intensive, and therefore the motivation and productivity in schools, hospitals, and public productivity of the service delivery workforce is a administrations. Key management practices include key determinant of human capital outcomes. goal setting, how these goals are communicated to Teachers are the most important determinant of staff, the extent of monitoring of the achievement of student learning outcomes and the difference these goals, the regularity and robustness of between a good teacher and a bad teacher can have performance evaluations, and rewards and recognition. long-lasting impacts on students’ lives beyond their A small but growing empirical management literature academics, including on their earnings capacity as on public-sector organizations shows linkages between adults (Chetty et al. 2012). Improving workforce management quality in schools and hospitals, on the productivity is also important for fiscal reasons given one hand, and student-learning outcomes and the that the education and health workforce typically quality of hospital care, on the other (Bloom et al. 2015). comprises 40–50 percent of the total public sector Management quality also impacts project completion workforce and represents a significant proportion of rates (Rasul et al. 2017). PROTECT AND INVEST in people 38 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance For example, formal teacher recognition and access short survey, for example, can be an effective to professional development opportunities are a key mechanism for engaging staff, eliciting their feedback, ingredient of the teacher incentive package that has and having the type of regular dialogue that research made Shanghai one of the highest-performing reveals as having a positive impact on staff motivation education systems. Management quality also matters (Aker et al. 2019). The public sector in general has not for administrative staff who play a key role in financing, adequately leveraged technology for performance regulating, and monitoring service-delivery staff. One management, but many global private sector study, which was based on a survey of 23,000 civil companies are increasingly using mobile applications servants across countries in Africa, Asia, Europe, and to elicit feedback on staff and manager performance Latin America, found that higher levels of self-reported (Ewenstein et al. 2016). performance orientation in public administration (civil servants reporting that performance mattered for These examples underline a more general point promotion and rewards) were correlated with higher that digital technologies offer considerable levels of self-reported satisfaction and work motivation potential for improving government productivity (Meyer-Sahling et al. 2018). and achieving human capital outcomes, but only if technology is coupled with “analog complements.” Digital technologies, combined with sound All too often, the considerable investments in management, offer low-cost possibilities for e-government systems fail to have the desired impact improving the accountability and productivity of not because there was something technologically service providers. Ghost workers and service provider wrong with the system but because enough attention absenteeism are major problems in South Asian and was not paid to the failures on the “analog” side—for African countries. Nigeria’s implementation of a digital example, cumbersome civil service rules and ID system for civil servants enabled it to remove more bureaucratic resistance to changes in work practices than 60,000 ghost workers off the government and cross-agency collaboration. A series of surveys payrolls, saving US$1 billion annually, and providing a conducted by the Organization for Economic return on investment of nearly 20,000 percent in one Cooperation and Development (OECD), for example, year (Gelb et al. 2013). Evidence from impact showed that “analog” workplace practices such as evaluations in Haiti, India, Pakistan, and Uganda shows teamwork, autonomy, task discretion, mentoring, that digital monitoring can complement sound training, and incentives were the most important management in reducing absenteeism (World Bank complementary ingredients for effective use of digital 2016b). In Pakistan, smartphone-based monitoring of technologies in the workplace (OECD/ILO 2017). district health supervisors in rural clinics doubled the rate of inspections of health facilities and reduced COVID-19 has also underlined the importance of medical worker absenteeism, but in localities known these analog complements for building resilient for the strong influence of patronage politics in teacher public sector bureaucracies. Recent surveys conducted management, the results were less encouraging. In by the World Bank to assess the impact of COVID-19 on India, the digital monitoring of health workers did public administrations in six countries found that while improve attendance but only in those local three-quarters of the staff had to work remotely during governments that used the data to sanction absent the lockdowns, productivity was constrained by weak workers, which was often difficult because of digital access, the legal need to submit paper cumbersome civil service rules or because of political documents, and limited team communication (World resistance. In Uganda, what reduced absenteeism was Bank 2021a). What is required, in addition to the longer- combining teacher incentive pay with monitoring term investments in improving digital technology, are technology. In Haiti, the experiment failed because more immediate reforms such as targeted training on government teachers had not been paid for months digital skills and greater delegation of decision-making and resented the perceived additional unfairness of responsibilities to better enable workers to be more being digitally monitored on top of that—adding insult productive when working from home. to injury, as it were. The private sector, with strong government Digital technologies can also be an effective regulation and oversight, can play a vital role in motivational tool to keep staff engaged and pro- improving access and the quality of service delivery ductive. A regularly conducted mobile phone-based in resource-constrained environments. Private 39 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 3: GOVERNANCE TO TRANSLATE FISCAL POLICIES INTO HUMAN CAPITAL OUTCOMES schools, clinics, and hospitals are responsible for a has been declining in the OECD countries over the significant share of service delivery in the LICs and past decade, and several region or country-specific MICs—for example, roughly 14 percent of primary surveys show similar downward trends. In part, this students in these countries attend private schools, problem of government legitimacy is driven by poor and 41 percent of current health expenditures in LICs service delivery. For example, in the Middle East and are out-of-pocket expenditures (World Bank 2018d; North Africa region, the Gallup World Poll and Arab WHO 2021). This underscores the importance of Barometer surveys reveal a high correlation between effective government regulation, first, to address citizen satisfaction with services and their perceptions problems of asymmetric information and, second, to of the pervasiveness of corruption and trust in make it easier for citizens, particularly the poor, to government (Brixi et al. 2015). Declining trust is also evaluate the quality of the services they are paying fueled by the expansion of broadband internet that for and ensure that the private sector is delivering for has exponentially increased access to both all income groups. information and misinformation to citizens. One rigorous study of survey data from more than Governments can also enter into public-private 840,000 individuals found that an increase in mobile partnerships (PPPs), such as contracting, which broadband internet access across regions correlated attempts to tackle the problem of weak provider with lower approvals of government, and that accountability through government financing of the declines in government legitimacy associated with delivery of the services and private sector the expansion of the internet were greater in management of schools and health centers (Patrinos countries with more corrupt governments (Guriev et et al. 2009). The logic of the contracting model is that al. forthcoming). private management increases facility autonomy by relaxing rigid civil service and public financial Restoring government trust with citizens will be management rules, and better enables teachers and necessary for a resilient recovery. Trust in health personnel to be held to account for delivering government has been critical for effective pandemic results. Evidence from recent impact evaluations in response, from citizens abiding by social distancing Liberia and Pakistan found that privately managed rules and masking requirements to their willingness and publicly financed schools improved access to to be vaccinated despite allegations of certain education and had higher student-learning outcomes, undesirable side effects. It will also be essential for a and that these gains were due to better school resilient recovery as trust is both an outcome of management rather than the increased enrollment of effective service delivery and a driver of an engaged students from more privileged backgrounds, and citizenry that can demand better services. Low trust were achieved at lower cost (Romero et al. 2020; impacts human capital outcomes because it leads to Barrera-Osorio et al). Governments have to effectively a cycle of low performance where poor services and manage PPP contracts to achieve good results by corruption reduce trust in government, which in turn defining and monitoring key performance indicators leads to low citizen engagement both in elections and and being alert to the potentially perverse behaviors in social accountability forums, and thus little pressure of the private providers. on governments to reform (Brixi et al. 2015). Trust is also important in citizens’ private behaviors and actions that are important for human capital outcomes, 3.4 Transparency, Accountability such as receptivity to nutritional and hygiene and Trust interventions or use of family planning services. COVID-19 has struck at a time when governments Accountability and oversight agencies are critical all over the world are confronted by declining for transparency and restoring trust in government, citizen trust and legitimacy. Corruption is a daily particularly given the greater use of streamlined reality for millions of people who access human government spending procedures during the capital services, whether through kickbacks for school pandemic response, which increases the risk of meal contracts, bribes paid to doctors and nurses for corruption. During the Ebola response, for example, treatment, or in the contracting of pharmaceuticals or there was widespread abuse of procedures to divert textbooks (Anderson et al. 2019). World Values funding from intended purposes (World Bank 2020h). Surveys, for example, show that trust in government Supreme audit institutions (SAIs) will have a key role PROTECT AND INVEST in people 40 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance to play in preserving integrity in spending; maintaining information they receive. Additionally, local community- their independence and strengthening their capacity driven development programs that ostensibly to conduct audits of human capital spending will be empower communities to participate in local priorities. The International Organization of Supreme development decision-making are frequently captured Audit Institutions (INTOSAI), for example, is focusing by local elites (Mansuri et al. 2013). Two key on improving its e-learning resources for its members preconditions for governments to successfully gain the to better enable them to conduct pandemic-related incentive and the capacity to respond to citizen voices audits (Mona El-Chami 2020). are effective partnership between governments and citizens, and secondly, complementarities between To restore trust, governments can create bottom-up accountability and internal government institutional spaces for citizen voices, and take the accountability mechanisms. Examples: in Uganda, initiative to close the feedback loop. A large body of infant mortality was significantly reduced through a academic literature on social accountability local health-sector program that involved a partnership mechanisms such as citizen and community report between local governments and communities on cards, citizen feedback portals, and community health provider monitoring, linked to social rewards monitoring of service providers reveals that successful and sanctions. Brazilian municipalities that effectively citizen engagement depends on a variety of contextual implemented participatory budgeting, in which citizens factors, and that transparency or community had direct input into municipal resource allocation mobilization are insufficient to improve service delivery decisions, spent more on sanitation and health (Fox 2015). Citizens all too often fail to act on the services, thereby reducing infant mortality rates. 1 These are examples of integrated health dashboards. For the DRC, see https://www.fbp-rdc.org; for Cameroon https:// front.fbrcameroun.org; and for the Kyrgyz Republic http://rbf.med.kg. 2 Simson (2012). 3 A key finding there is that human capital is much larger than many realize, “accounting for roughly two thirds of global wealth,” with its share of overall wealth accumulation increasing even faster in low- and middle-income countries. Indeed, the book states that “in low-income countries, this share increased from 32 percent to 43 percent over two decades, consistent with the growth path discussed earlier in which development occurs by increasing investments in human and produced capital. In lower middle-income countries, it rose from 44% to 52%” (p. 15). 4 The “fix” involved applying the budget release procedure for the “regular” budget, including civil servant salaries, allowing the Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) to receive the annual appropriation in four equal automatic installments per quarter rather than having to seek authorization for a release of a specific amount against an expenditure report, following the procedure applied to the “development” budget (World Bank 2014). 5 World Bank staff calculations based on EU SILC and LABLAC data. 41 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 4: SECURING RESOURCES FOR HUMAN CAPITAL PRIORITIES CHAPTER 4: SECURING RESOURCES FOR HUMAN CAPITAL PRIORITIES KEY MESSAGES • Immediate fiscal pressures imposed by the COVID-19 crisis call for protecting resources for human capital priorities, especially in financially constrained low-income countries. • Over the medium term, domestic resource mobilization will be a primary source of human capital investments and of a resilient recovery. • It is important that governments review budgets across and within sectors to cut unproductive expenditures and strengthen fiscal resilience. W here fiscal positions are stretched, securing parallel, it will be essential to ensure the continuity of resources for human capital priorities public services and support the most vulnerable part involves shielding critical budget lines of society (Loayza et al. 2020). Consequently, it is from fiscal consolidation in the short term. Over the crucial to reconcile the drive for an adjustment that medium term, it will require finding space within preserves output and restores investment and long- budgets that are pursuing cost-effective reforms, term growth with the concerns of preserving and and reprogramming budgets toward priorities. For restoring human capital, especially now that the countries that have challenges in raising government causality between the two is well established (see box revenue, the crisis has heightened the importance of 4.1). This is particularly relevant for financially mobilizing domestic resources over the medium term, constrained LICs, where fiscal space is already narrow and raising the level of governmental commitment and substantial human capital shortfalls and equity to human capital outcomes will be a crucial step. gaps existed even before the crisis. While most HICs and MICs may be able to continue to borrow to provide fiscal stimulus, many LICs A granular approach to fiscal adjustment would may require debt restructuring to stabilize their focus on the role of specific spending categories debt servicing, along with continuous international for the efficiency of a specific sector and its overall support to protect core human capital expenditures. medium- to long-term social returns. Beyond the Finally, drawing on the experience of previous crises, distinction between capital and current spending, it improved financial resilience throughout the public is necessary that while adjusting, countries protect in sector will facilitate continuity of top-priority programs. the short term those categories of spending that have critical impact on service delivery and long-term economic and social development. These categories of spending have several characteristics: They (1) are 4.1 Protecting Resources for critical for the operation of sectors (internal efficiency) Human Capital during the Crisis and for the continuation of service delivery (social returns); (2) often have a relatively low amount of Fiscal imbalances linked to the COVID-19 shock funds; and (3) are much easier to reduce, cut and will entail adjustments, making it crucial to protect constrain than the more politically sensitive wages spending that supports human capital and longer- and subsidies. Instead of cutting these essential term development. With the COVID-19 shock leading expenditures, a negotiated and temporary freeze of to massive fiscal imbalances and debt accumulation, the payroll might be more desirable, in the short term. inevitably countries will have to undertake fiscal As governments approach the recovery phase, they adjustment measures. The main argument in favor of are likely to scale down emergency expenditures, fiscal adjustment is that restoring fiscal balances including COVID-19 health-related spending, hence contributes to increasing savings and investments, the need to create fiscal space for preserving critical hence promoting long-term growth (IMF 1995). In categories of social spending. 43 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 4: SECURING RESOURCES FOR HUMAN CAPITAL PRIORITIES BOX 4.1: HUMAN CAPITAL, LONG-TERM GROWTH, AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS FOR ANALYTICAL TOOLS AND DECISION MAKING Although the existing economic literature given its role as both a driver and result of acknowledges the importance of human capital development outcomes. This requires adapting for economic growth, this is yet to be fully reflected the analytical tools used for policy simulation. in methodologies and tools. Methodologies still draw a separation between social and economic Skills composition, fertility scenarios, and spheres because the thinking is that resources demographic trends are some of the main typically are extracted from the economic sphere channels through which human capital and channeled into the social. This would make interacts with growth and development. To social spending a constraint on economic activity, reflect the impact of human capital on growth thereby crowding out productive spending. and development, modelling exercises could: However, if we take a human capital perspective, (1) integrate demographic/fertility scenarios; social spending begins to look different. In truth, (2) integrate skills composition scenarios; social expenditures, or at least part of them, are in and (3) combine #1 and #2 with structural- fact investments in the accumulation of people’s reforms-versus-no-reforms scenario analysis. productive capacities. This means that social Fertility/demographic scenarios reflect the sectors in fact have an economic dimension and impact of health investments and will allow can become determinants of growth. The social an assessment of the demographic dividend and economic spheres are really then aspects (or tax for aging populations) on growth and of a single organic sphere. This has implications development. Skills composition, on the for public action toward social sectors and for other hand, directly reflects investment in decision making and policy choices because education and would magnify the impact of it means that some components of social the demographic dividend (or attenuate the spending—considered by the existing economic demographic tax). Both demographic and literature as consumption that reduces savings— skills scenarios, and the underlying health and can actually be regarded as investments with education investments, would either magnify a long-term return, for which there is need to or dampen the impact of structural reforms. mobilize savings, including through borrowing. Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) models, If we take this perspective, it becomes clear and other models such as the overlapping that the role of human capital needs to be generations models, can be adapted for these reflected in the modelling tools that simulate types of simulations. MAMS (Maquette for MDGs and inform national policy options and guide the Simulation) is a CGE that has been extended decision-making process. Policy makers look for to cover the outcomes in terms of MDGs where to devote resources to reach long-term (then SDGs), and to consider the educational growth and development objectives. Hence, makeup of the labor force. The World Bank modelling exercises should include testing is now using LINKAGES, which could be policy options that promote human capital, adapted to generate results on human capital. Source: World Bank Staff In many sectors, the easiest budget items to cut spending at the expense of other essential health are often critical for the continuation of services, spending. For instance, while overall health spending and defunding them could have immediate and has increased, there is evidence of decreased efforts long-term implications on human capital outcomes. to control malaria during the COVID-19 pandemic (UN Those lines are often related to the provision of 2020). Cases of defunding of lines related to inputs and maintenance. In many countries, resources vaccination have also been reported, with lasting, have been reallocated in favor of COVID-19-related long-term, generational health impact and damage PROTECT AND INVEST in people 44 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance to human capital. The situation is likely to become enable a better understanding of linkages between catastrophic in countries with weak financial and inputs and outcomes, with the goal of improving the institutional capacities. Moving forward, it would be impact of spending on achieving national objectives. harmful if fiscal adjustments lead to a reduction in nonpersonnel recurrent spending (such as for routine maintenance, teaching and learning supplies, and 4.2 Mobilizing Domestic Resources professional development). Although these budgets tend to be relatively low, these items are critical to through a Human Capital Lens3 restoring sectors’ efficiency. Domestic resources are a primary source for driving Governments could explore adjustment options a resilient recovery over the medium term, but that protect expenditures that are critical for options for domestic revenue mobilization will vary compensating human capital losses and that greatly across country contexts. The basic provide a foundation for long-term development. components for building human capital cost around These expenditures, identified in Chapter 2, aim to 2.7 percent of GDP in the LICs, with a more mitigate the risk of permanent human capital losses. comprehensive coverage estimated at about They include immunization, nutrition, water and 11.5 percent of GDP (World Bank 2018c). To aid sanitation. Governments must identify sectors to be recovery from the economic fallout of COVID-19, the protected and, within these sectors, the most critical IMF calls tax reforms “a key element” in promoting budget lines with the highest developmental impact1. inclusive growth and suggests that MTFFs could Budget management frameworks are needed to include addressing weaknesses in tax systems in their identify and prioritize budget allocations across and focus on restoring space for action in indebted within sectors, as well as for the operationalization of countries (IMF 2021a).4 a “socially sensible” fiscal adjustment. The standardization of budget frameworks, and the Countries can be grouped into four types based on existence of analytical tools such as the World Bank’s their level of revenue collection and human capital BOOST Public Expenditure Database, make it expenditures: (1) Countries that underperform on possible to create frameworks for the identification of revenue collection while also underspending on human capital budget lines and to move toward human capital: these countries tend to fall short of the human capital development-based budgeting. 2 15-percent-of-GDP rule of thumb for governments to These frameworks allow measuring and budgeting sustain minimum service delivery;5 (2) countries with for desired sectoral outcomes and can be helpful to significant revenues but limited spending on human ministries of finance, including in dialogue with the capital: these include mostly resource-rich economies; IMF during periods of fiscal adjustment. (3) countries with high investments in human capital and high revenue: these are mostly countries with Clear planning and program classifications within established formal-sector economies and tax revenues the budget can enable better understanding across above 15 percent of GDP; and (4) countries that make sectors of the impact of spending changes on high investments in human capital as a share of public results beyond the current year. Governments with spending but do relatively poorly on revenue MTFFs are better positioned to assess the out-year mobilization: these include countries where limited knock-on effects of current year spending reductions domestic resource mobilization (DRM) constrains the or higher taxes, and their macroeconomic and social effectiveness of investing in human capital. incidence and consequences. Where medium-term perspectives exist in a sector such as health—where The countries in the first and fourth groups are linkages between resources, outputs and outcomes where DRM is most salient in determining the are more clearly elucidated—it is far easier to gauge funding of human capital investments. These the multiyear impact of present fiscal choices to encompass most of the world’s poorest countries, reduce spending. MTEFs are the natural complement many of which are also fragile states. In these to MTFFs. MTEFs can be applied at central and countries, improvements in DRM are more likely to subnational government levels and within sectors to lead to an increase in human capital investments. inform budgets and program classifications. This would These improvements should be done in a fair and 45 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 4: SECURING RESOURCES FOR HUMAN CAPITAL PRIORITIES sustainable way through a revision of the tax system respectively. Regressive taxes typically include turnover that would take stock of all sources of revenue and taxes, sales taxes, and certain excise and customs could introduce “wealth taxation” as an important duties. Countries should consider lowering sales tax channel for improving equity and progressivity. The rates and import duties on food and other necessities latter are important for improving trust as a key and moving toward more progressive personal income component in voluntary tax compliance, which would tax systems. On the international front, fighting tax raise revenues and create fiscal space, including for evasion and tax avoidance, including illicit financial human capital spending (Prichard et al. 2019). flows, will be key. Also, better use of property taxes and inheritance taxes helps. Governments could consider several options to adapt the DRM system in favor of human capital: 3. Including soft earmarks. It may be worthwhile to (1) Increasing overall revenue collection through earmark taxes to help fund specific human capital broadening the tax base; (2) Improving tax equity; investments. Historically, public-finance practitioners (3) Including soft earmarks to provide an additional and have been less than enthusiastic about earmarking— ring-fenced funding stream for human capital linking specific revenue with a specific expenditure— investments; (4) Introducing health taxes as financial because it can undermine the general efficiency of the disincentives to discourage harmful kinds of public budgeting process. But recent evidence has consumption; (5) Offering incentives to taxpayers for shown that soft earmarking can work, especially in investing in human capital; and (6) Introducing addressing political economy constraints where environmental taxes that generate health and climate entrenched interests oppose reform, such as the case co-benefits. of tobacco taxation (Kaiser et al. 2016). 1. Increasing overall revenue collection through the 4. Instituting health taxes. Health taxes, or excise broadening of the tax base. The reasons for low tax taxes levied on harmful products that lead to a collection are related to tax policy and administration decrease in human capital, aim at changing behavior challenges, including tax expenditures such as and offer a chance to simultaneously increase healthy exclusions, exemptions, deductions, tax credits, tax outcomes and invest in human capital. Health taxes holidays, preferential tax rates, and deferrals which all are also a way to discourage individuals from using lead to revenue losses. In many countries, these harmful products without making the products illegal.6 significantly limit resource mobilization. In Africa, for example, country-level estimates of the cost of tax The behavioral impact of health taxes is the most expenditures range from 2 percent to 7 percent of evident with health taxes that improve population GDP (Choi, Dutz and Usman 2020). In some countries, health through reduced consumption of unhealthy such as India, reduction of exemptions is a key products. More than 10 million premature deaths each element of their DRM strategy (see box 4.2). While year—about 16 percent of all deaths in the world— exemptions have negative implications for the fairness, could be prevented if the consumption of tobacco, efficiency, and effectiveness of tax regimes, they are alcohol, or sugar-sweetened beverages were not a key criterion for investment decisions. Although reduced. 7 Excessive consumption of unhealthy tax reforms are generally a medium-term agenda, a products is persistent, or even increasing, in many LICs revision of tax expenditures often offers room for quick and MICs and contributes to deaths from gains. In the medium term, it is important to situate and noncommunicable diseases, half of which occur reorient tax system reforms that support the prematurely before age 70. While this remains above government’s projections of spending needs, including all a human tragedy, it also has economic human capital investments (see box 4.2). consequences since people are often cut off during their peak productivity years, preventing countries and 2. Improving tax equity. A more equitable tax system households from reaping the full returns on human is a medium-term objective that can promote human capital investments. Excise taxation is a cost-effective capital by (1) easing the tax burden on the poor by policy measure to reduce the consumption of these increasing their after-tax disposable income; and (2) products. Indeed, a 20 percent price increase of these reducing evasion, avoidance, and certain favorable tax products at current consumption levels would lead to treatments. These two strategies may help increase health gains in terms of life years over 50 years in the private and public funding of human capital, LICs and MICs (Summan et al. 2020). PROTECT AND INVEST in people 46 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance BOX 4.2: MEDIUM-TERM REVENUE STRATEGIES (MTRS) A Medium-Term Revenue Strategy (MTRS) is political support to the reforms; and (4) secures a process of implementation of tax system adequate resources domestically and from reform over time which aims to achieve donors to support reform implementation and a social contract in the country on revenue ensure efficiency through coordinated effort. mobilization goals, a comprehensive reform plan for the tax system, domestic political Country-led and country-owned Integrated commitment for sustained implementation National Financing Frameworks (INFFs) help of the reform plan, and secured support for mobilize and manage financial and other means of capacity development to overcome constraints implementation in support of sustainable national in developing and implementing the MTRS. development strategies. INFFs help policy makers (Platform for Collaboration on Tax 2019) map the landscape for sustainable financing of development. They lay out a strategy to increase An MTRS (1) sets the revenue mobilization investment for development, make the most target based on envisaged high-priority public effective use of it, coordinate technical and financial expenditures; (2) designs a comprehensive tax cooperation, manage financial and nonfinancial system reform, covering policy, administration, risks, and ultimately achieve the priorities and the legal framework; (3) commits steady articulated in the national development strategy. Source: World Bank Staff Health taxes result in healthier populations and can gaps between men and women in labor force generate significant revenues for the budget even participation, Poland used tax credits for childcare to in challenging tax administration and low-capacity encourage mothers to rejoin the labor force, while environments.8 For example, between 2012 and Turkey provided tax credits to childcare providers to 2016, the Philippines used increased revenue from increase the supply of childcare centers. reforming the tax structures and increasing rates on alcohol and tobacco taxes to triple the budget for the 6. Environmental taxes. Over the medium term, Department of Health and triple the share of its revenues generated by Environmental Tax Reform population that had health insurance (Ozer et al. (ETR) can be used to reduce other preexisting taxes 2020). Moreover, country studies indicate that excise or to finance spending on health, education, and taxes for improving health outcomes are progressive social protection. They can finance investment in over the long term (Fuchs et al. 2019). climate-change mitigation and adaptation, offset the social impact of other forms of pollution, and Some conditions associated with the consumption accelerate the transition toward safer, more efficient of unhealthy products are emerging as independent infrastructure and cleaner technologies. Moreover, risk factors for COVID-19 (smoking and obesity). ETR is a cost-effective means of reducing carbon Health taxes can improve health outcomes and, in the emissions and local pollution; it leverages market short term, could decrease the societal impact of mechanisms, sending price signals that discourage future COVID-19 waves. Reductions in conditions the burning of fossil fuels and other environmentally associated with excessive consumption of unhealthy damaging activities while promoting innovation and products will also relieve overburdened health care investment in cleaner, more efficient sources of systems and assist in system-wide recovery from the energy; and it generates health and climate co- pandemic. benefits (see box 4.4). 5. Incentives to taxpayers for investing in human Finally, the increased devolution of human capital- capital. Government tax policies can orient citizens’ related spending powers, essentially education and human capital investments. For example, to address health, to local governments around the world 47 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 4: SECURING RESOURCES FOR HUMAN CAPITAL PRIORITIES highlights the importance of local finances, 4.3 Finding Space within Budgets especially property taxes. In the LICs and MICs, the main source of financing for subnational entities is Governments can review budgets across and within transfers from the central government. But because sectors to cut unproductive expenditures and the fiscal space of many central governments is secure financing for human capital and accelerating already narrow and limited, many local governments recovery. Building or reinstating resilient and inclusive end up without the resources needed for them to service delivery systems in the areas of health, carry out their mission. Not surprisingly, they often education, and social protection will involve a complain about erratic resource transfers from central comprehensive review of budget allocation and government. Hence, the question of securing careful prioritization. It will also involve reviewing predictable, continuous resources to local financing within sectoral budgets and engaging in governments through local revenue instruments intrasectoral reallocations to move funding away from becomes critical for their operations, including those less effective programs toward investments that are related to human capital. more likely to improve high-priority sector outcomes. Property tax is the main local revenue instrument in Lowering energy subsidies is a good example of many developed countries, although it lags in the how regressive spending that once promoted the LICs and MICs. Property tax has important features that inefficient use of fossil fuels—with negative make it a suitable instrument: it has a physical base consequences for both the environment and (property) that is easy to capture; it is predictable since health—can be redirected to serve people. Energy the base changes only gradually over time; and it is subsidies, estimated at 0.6 percent of GDP on average equitable since the size and value of property globally,9 drive the overuse of fossil fuels and crowd proportionally reflect wealth. However, a prerequisite for out public spending in other sectors, including high- efficient property taxation is an operating cadaster able priority areas such as education, health and social to register properties and their values, hence allowing protection. Additionally, in many countries, energy for the evaluation of the tax base and for its taxation. subsidies tend to be regressive: they, disproportionately BOX 4.3: ENVIRONMENT TAX REFORMS: SETTING THE STAGE FOR A GREEN RECOVERY By discouraging pollution-intensive activities, Despite the numerous benefits of ETR, public environmental taxation can promote improvements support for it tends to be low because of the in air quality and public health. Moreover, the growth concentration of costs among certain classes of benefits of Environmental Tax Reform (ETR) are more firms and consumers. By contrast, the benefits pronounced in economic activity in developing of ETR are diffused throughout society, making countries—for example, output and employment. opposition to ETR easier to mobilize than This is due to several features common to these support. Addressing the lack of public support is countries, especially (i) large informal sectors, therefore critical to ensuring ETR is implemented which create opportunities to increase employment and sustained. For instance, ensuring that and output by using ETR revenues to reduce compensation mechanisms are in place formal-sector taxes; (ii) inefficient tax systems, before the reform takes effect can help defuse which create opportunities for ETR to reduce tax opposition. For example, the Iranian government distortions, broaden the tax base, and generate transferred funds to dedicated bank accounts tax rents rather than profits; and (iii) low levels of to compensate citizens before raising energy domestic taxation, which create opportunities costs and released these accounts on the date for ETR to mobilize domestic resources to of the reform. Strategies such as these can help fund growth-enhancing public investment. policy makers build and sustain support for ETR. Source: Adapted from Pigato (2019) PROTECT AND INVEST in people 48 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance benefit wealthier citizens, who consume more energy, Higher energy prices could also make it harder for with limited impact on protecting the poor. domestic firms in emerging markets to compete in both foreign and domestic markets, especially in Lowering energy subsidies has a direct impact by energy-intensive tradable sectors. However, in many creating fiscal space for human capital spending and countries, energy represents a relatively small share of generating large co-benefits, including the reduction production costs, and while it is fundamental for of climate risks. As demonstrated by Egypt and energy-intensive producers, for most industries, energy Indonesia (see box 4.4), lowering energy subsidies can cost is just one of the many factors that determine their create the fiscal space for pro-poor and human capital competitiveness. Moreover, competitiveness losses for spending. Social safety nets are needed to protect some types of firms or sectors may be more than offset lower-income households from energy price increases by the gains reaped by those who benefit from the and assist all those adversely affected by a transition redeployment of resources. to decarbonization. Policy makers can increase public spending on policies that disproportionately benefit the Where it is not possible to make intersectoral budget poor, such as housing support or public health care. adjustments, reallocations within sectoral budgets Moreover, higher energy prices discourage pollution- can protect frontline services. In these cases, it will intensive activities, improve air quality and public be critical to prioritize existing funds to cover the health, alleviate traffic congestion, and reduce the additional costs associated with the pandemic frequency of road accidents. Removing subsidies, response, and to minimize disruptions to the quality of developing social safety nets, and investing in human services. This might involve postponing expansion capital are excellent policy choices in a post-COVID-19 plans, reducing other planned capital investments, world. These reforms are green because they enable reducing training and supervision budgets, or reduced carbon use, resilient in that they enhance temporarily shifting resources from nonessential sustainability, efficiency, and the progressivity of public services to the frontlines. However, any reallocations finances, and inclusive because they are pro-poor. would need to be carefully assessed to ensure that BOX 4.4: EGYPT AND INDONESIA: TWO CASES OF PROGRESSIVE ENERGY SUBSIDY REFORMS Egypt successfully reduced fossil fuel subsidies, energy subsidies had declined to US$7.3 billion which were 7 percent of GDP in 2013/14, to from US$28.9 billion in 2014, while health spending 2.7 percent of GDP in 2016/17. The Egyptian reached US$8 billion compared to US$5 billion government used the fiscal space to roll out cash- in 2014, and infrastructure spending hit transfer programs, expand school lunch programs, US$30.1 billion, up from US$13.1 billion three years and reallocate resources to health and education earlier (Republic of Indonesia 2019). which, in FY2015, outstripped spending on energy subsidies for the first time (ESMAP 2017). When Beyond subsidies, Indonesia is aiming to build the pandemic hit, the country had the fiscal space consistent signaling in terms of carbon pricing needed to enhance health spending. The country while protecting the segments of the society that also managed to expand the social safety net, most need support to face the increase in energy with a particular focus on women. prices. This has involved reforms to their safety net, including the use of digital technology to In late 2014, Indonesia used the window of identify the poor. opportunity created by a sharp fall in global oil prices to shift fiscal priorities away from untargeted The resources required to recover from COVID-19 energy subsidies toward targeted transfers and crisis and the need to meet the Paris Agreement health investments. As a result, energy subsidies and address environmental degradation dropped from 3.2 percent of GDP in 2014 to challenges, prompt a serious reassessment of 1 percent of GDP in 2015. By 2017, spending on energy subsidies. Source: World Bank Staff 49 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 4: SECURING RESOURCES FOR HUMAN CAPITAL PRIORITIES they do not reduce current levels of access or Commercial and official bilateral creditors need to standards of quality. be engaged to prevent extreme periods of fiscal austerity that can lead to erosions of human capital. The private sector can be a source of funding of The IMF (2020) has issued recommendations on debt human capital as well as a provider of human management that focus on how to “cushion a liquidity capital-related services. Mobilizing Finance for shock.” Where debt restructurings prove necessary, Development, a World Bank initiative, is based on the both creditors and debtors should aim for ambitious fundamental assumption that government budgets will restructurings that lead to permanent solutions (Kose cover only part of the resources needed to finance et al. 2021). Kharas et al. propose a debt-resolution development. In many countries, the private sector framework with several options, including one where can invest in areas that impact long-term growth and even a highly indebted country would still receive development if business reforms are implemented external financing provided it has a “set of environmentally and appropriate risk mitigation instruments are sustainable and socially inclusive policies in place to deployed to address the shortcomings of the ensure that economic growth is actually benefitting its investment climate. Moreover, in specific segments, people” (Kharas et al. 2020). In November 2020, the namely where the public sector lacks the capacity to G20 approved an extension of the DSSI to June 30, deploy and where the for-profit private sector has no 2021 and put in place a Common Framework for Debt interest in investing, social enterprises (SEs) can fill Treatment beyond the DSSI and on a case-by-case the service delivery gaps, especially in the LICs.10 basis.11 In February 2021, the G20 reaffirmed their Adapted procurement approaches that emphasize support for vulnerable countries facing an unsustainable environmental and social dimensions can promote the debt burden, and their commitment to the involvement of SEs. Combined with results-based implementation of the Common Framework and DSSI.12 financing (RBF), social procurement and the On April 7, 2021, G20 bilateral official creditors agreed involvement of SEs can enhance the focus on social to a final extension of the DSSI by 6 months through and economic results and contribute to developing end-December 2021. human capital. Beyond the pandemic, identifying parts of spending as long-term investments in human capital 4.4 Borrowing, Debt Management accumulation would change the approach to mobilizing resources in favor of the concerned and International Support for sectors, including through debt. If spending on social Human Capital Priorities sectors and beyond is, at least partially, an investment in the accumulation of human capital as additional The pandemic has accelerated a global “fourth productive capacity, then devoting savings to this wave” of debt buildup, which calls for actions to spending becomes an important goal. Hence the stabilize debt while protecting human capital rationale behind directing DSSI savings toward spending. As mentioned in Chapter 1, many countries preserving social spending and human capital during are highly indebted and financially constrained. The the crisis.13 Beyond the crisis, capital markets are stock of public external debt for developing countries gaining importance as a source of funding to combat was estimated at US$3.1 trillion, or 26 percent of GNI, climate change and achieve social goals, and they can at end-2019, with large disparities between regions: play a crucial role in greening the recovery. Some 47 percent in Europe and central Asia versus countries, such as Indonesia, are innovating on green 18 percent in East Asia and Pacific (World Bank financing by issuing green bonds both domestically 2020e). Debt service for 2021 and 2022 is estimated and globally. Indonesia is also using its environmental at respectively US$356 billion and US$329 billion agency for environmental fund management to (Kharas et al. 2020). Of these, Debt Service mobilize and use funding from philanthropy, multilateral Suspension Initiative (DSSI) countries would have to development banks, and domestic resources. Possibly repay US$24 billion in interest and US$66 billion in related to efforts to fight the pandemic, social bond principle. In parallel, as of end-2020, DSSI agreements issuance in 2020 increased substantially; and have covered US$5 billion in 40 eligible countries. sustainable debt issuance, at more than US$650 billion, is set to surpass the 2019 record (IMF 2021c). PROTECT AND INVEST in people 50 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance Mobilizing domestic or foreign savings for human International support for human capital during and capital investments is beneficial to both the public beyond the COVID-19 crisis remains key, especially and private sectors and society at large. Borrowing for LICs and, specifically, for the most fragile for the social sector should no longer be thought of among them. LICs will still require sustained and as unproductive or crowding out private investment. substantial international support to preserve and Rather, such borrowing can now be considered as an develop their human capital. In those countries, the investment with a long-term return that should be size of the economy is often so small that ratios to compared to the cost of borrowing, and this return GDP are of little relevance to assess needs or the can be estimated using models and tools (see box 4.1). sufficiency of resources, even to reach the minimums. Countries’ medium-term debt management strategies If these countries were to take charge of the minimum (MTDSs) spell out financing strategies, and countries spending required for their human capital, they would in their strategies could consider the use of structurally fall short of having the necessary sustainability and social bonds14 if debt sustainability resources even if they were to increase their DRM to considerations allow and they have access to markets. the 15-percent-of-GDP threshold and beyond (see The MTDS is aligned with the MTFF macrofiscal box 4.5). Moreover, such countries often lack access framework and links “borrowing with macroeconomic to financial markets at reasonable cost and rely on policy” (World Bank 2021d). The concept of human concessional borrowing and grants. They would capital and streamlining it within MTFFs imply a key need continuous, scaled-up international support to role of human capital in impacting growth and gives be able to meet the minimum needs in terms of human capital spending a macrocritical dimension human capital spending as well as other budgetary (IMF 2019).15 obligations. BOX 4.5: SPENDING PER CAPITA VS SPENDING AS PERCENTAGE OF GDP: THE STRUCTURAL GAP OF LICS In 2018, the average GDP per capita among threshold of 15 percent of GDP, it would mobilize the LICs (which together account for 651 million US$300–350 million, and the US$40 per capita people) was US$796. If these countries were to would still absorb over 55 percent of the resources finance their average per capita spending on available through DRM, just for a minimum of health—US$40—from their domestic budgets, health spending. this alone would correspond to 5 percent of GDP for a mere minimum of health spending. For Another example is the Democratic Republic of many of these countries, this amounts to more Congo (DRC). In 2018, the DRC had a population than half their domestic revenue collection; only of 84 million, a GDP of US$47 billion (GDP per a few of them could mobilize 15 percent of GDP capita of US$561), and a DRM of 10 percent of in revenues. GDP or US$4.7 billion. This is half the revenue of Washington, DC, with a population of 0.6 million. The situation among the poorest countries Financed through the budget of DRC, US$40 per is even more acute. Take the example of the capita amounts to US$3.4 billion and absorbs Central African Republic (CAR), a fragile and 72 percent of domestic resources. If DRM were at conflict-affected country with 4.7 million people in 15 percent of GDP, the US$40 per capita would still 2018, a GDP of US$2.2 billion (that is, GDP per absorb around 50 percent of domestic resources. capita of US$476) and a DRM of 8.8 percent of GDP, or US$196 million. If CAR were to finance The COVID-19 crisis is likely to have worsened the the US$40 from its domestic budget, this would already low, effective capacity of poor economies amount to US$187 million, equivalent to almost its to mobilize resources, and the extent of minimum entire DRM. Even if the country’s DRM reached the needs to which they must respond. Source: World Bank Staff, based on WDI database, IMF Article IV for relevant countries 51 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 4: SECURING RESOURCES FOR HUMAN CAPITAL PRIORITIES Where possible, streamlining human capital On the risk-reduction side, reforms can be spending within the rules of sovereign wealth introduced that will decrease the likelihood and funds (SWFs) can help with both sheltering this severity of future crises. This can be part of labor- spending from downturns and planning over the intensive and productivity-enhancing stimulus medium term. SWFs take various forms. Their main packages for economic recovery, including investments purpose is smoothing public spending by saving in green technologies, environmental stewardship, and revenues during an upward economic cycles and improved agricultural techniques. Water, sanitation and spending during downward cycles. Another purpose hygiene interventions can be strengthened as part of of SWFs is saving resources devoted for longer-term basic public health strategies, including to help prevent investments in growth and development. Resources infectious disease, and as a focus on urban planning of SWFs are often related to, but not limited to, natural and environmental management. Safety nets and resources exports. SWFs use either the saved funds, social insurance can be expanded to keep people from the proceeds from the investment of those saved falling into poverty, with the attendant damage on funds, or a mix of both. The importance of human human and environmental capital, while also capital implies that countries with SWFs could include encouraging investments in human capital and risk- the preservation of critical human capital spending in reduction measures. downturns among their rules and objectives. This requires a pre-identification of the budget lines Preparedness for mitigating future crises will related to these critical human capital expenditures. involve investments in response systems for a Beyond responding to downturns, SWF rules and range of crises, from pandemics to natural disasters objectives could also encompass the promotion of and economic shocks. Safety nets need to have human capital spending over the medium/long term. greater coverage and flexibility if they are to help people respond to individual shocks as well as large Aside from SWFs, many countries build up “budget covariate crises. Currently, less than half of the world’s reserves” within their central banks without having any population has access to any kind of formal social special fund with explicit rules. These reserves can protection. In looking toward building a more robust also be used to smooth the impact of a downturn on and resilient future, social protection systems need to critical human capital spending. be expanded, and social insurance coverage decoupled from formal-sector employment to provide a stronger basis for managing a range of risks. Some 4.5 Reducing the Risk and Impacts countries seized the opportunity of the crisis to accelerate social protection reform while leveraging of Future Crises digital tools, such as Saudi Arabia, which prior to the crisis had already started reframing its social Strengthening countries’ resilience to future crises protection strategy to build an integrated social will involve investments in risk reduction and protection delivery system. Other forms of insurance, mitigation. Human capital protection and green for example, against the impacts of natural disasters, objectives can be built into recovery packages to can also be expanded, including through risk pooling reduce risks and increase LICs’ and MICs’ resilience across countries. On the health front, ongoing action to future shocks. International cooperation will also is needed to address zoonotic transmission from be needed—from responding to crises, including animals to humans, to upgrade disaster risk- food crisis and humanitarian emergencies, to management systems, and to adapt urban planning investing in crisis prevention through technical and to facilitate disease control. Strengthening health financial support. The IMF has stated that systems also implies using reliable data to target temporary and targeted measures may need to action and to provide concrete, science-based be extended, with contingent spending plans communication to the public. developed for adverse situations. These can provide additional support through supplementary Strengthened service-delivery systems can help to budgets, established COVID-19 funds for prevent the worst impacts of crises, and to contingency...and supportive funding from formulate agile responses when crises do occur. bilateral and multilateral assistance. (IMF 2021a). Foundational systems that support the delivery of multiple services, and appropriate integration of the PROTECT AND INVEST in people 52 INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL FOR A RESILIENT RECOVERY: The Role of Public Finance private sector into service delivery systems, can help As countries look to build resilience in the face of ensure that the right public investments reach the future shocks, financial instruments need to be intended beneficiaries and translate into improved prepared so that they can be deployed rapidly with human capital outcomes. This includes energy, water the onset of future crises. These instruments include and sanitation, and digital technology investments. contingency borrowing, sovereign wealth funds, and Broadband access is increasingly needed not only to other crisis-response vehicles. There is also a need deliver core services such as education, as starkly for close coordination with the IMF on fiscal revealed by the COVID-19 crisis, but to provide a management, including expenditure frameworks for platform for responding to crises. medium-term planning and debt sustainability analysis to manage debt vulnerabilities. Fiscal planning, Access to many services also depends on people including within UN agencies and major international possessing a valid form of identification, which NGOs, is needed to ensure adequate humanitarian puts a premium on civil registration, beginning at responses when a life-threatening crisis occurs. birth, and foundational identification systems. In Multilateral financial institutions can be better the Philippines, for example, longstanding prepared to provide fast-disbursing budget support identification problems hampered the implementation and investment projects, while the central banks of of response and relief because of difficulty in some HICs can be prepared to make foreign identifying the beneficiaries of social programs and exchange available through swap lines with their the lack of bank accounts for the efficient distribution counterparts elsewhere. Beyond direct financial of transfers. The country therefore decided to planning, adequate preparation could also involve accelerate its national ID implementation using online regulatory adjustments, political support, and national registration and managed to get 27 million individuals and international cooperation to engage in forward- registered so far between the start of the pandemic looking strategic planning. and April 2021, with plans to achieve a total of 50 to 70 million by end-2021. The objectives of accelerated identification are threefold: strengthening financial inclusion with the target of having a bank account for each household by the end of 2021; assisting in vaccine distribution; and improving the distribution of cash transfers. 1 World Bank teams, with their detailed knowledge of relevant sectors in client countries, can help foster home-grown adjustment policies and dialogue with the IMF to design consolidation programs in collaboration with countries. The IMF’s strategy for engagement on social spending shows an openness toward designing “socially sensible” fiscal targets and rules that protect social and economic development. 2 The substantial investment made over the past two years to standardize the Bank’s country-based BOOST platforms into sets of annual statistics that are comparable down to the granular level might come in handy. World Bank teams have now examined the entire portfolio of about 80 BOOST countries by tagging line-item expenditures to compile a vast amount of comparative fiscal statistics encompassing granular dimensions such as subsidies, maintenance, capital and current transfers, goods and services (G&S), and so on across all subsectors. This work is at an advanced enough stage that it can now permit a refined analysis of countries’ human capital budgets. 53 PROTECT AND INVEST in people Chapter 4: SECURING RESOURCES FOR HUMAN CAPITAL PRIORITIES 3 This section of chapter 4 draws on World Bank 2018a, an unpublished note. 4 In Fiscal Monitor Update January 2021, the IMF states: Addressing weaknesses in tax systems—including domestic measures and reforming international taxation—would support inclusive growth, through broader bases, more progressive personal income taxation, more neutral capital taxation, improved VAT design, greater use of carbon, property, and inheritance taxes, and digital enhancements in revenue administration. Public debt jumped up as a result of the crisis and will keep vulnerabilities elevated. Balancing short-term demand support for the recovery with medium-term sustainability is critical. Credible medium-term fiscal frameworks and calibrated consolidation strategies need to be developed, especially in high-debt countries, supported by pro-growth and inclusive measures. Early announcement of such packages could create near-term space for maneuver. A key element of such strategies will be tax reforms to promote inclusive growth (IMF 2021a, 6). 5 Using historical data from 139 countries, Gaspar, Jaramillo, and Wingender (2016) find that the GDP per capita of a country that is just above the 15 percent of GDP threshold will have grown by 7.5 percent after 10 years. 6 The World Bank recommends that governments control tobacco consumption through a seven-pronged strategy: (1) Go big, go fast: focus first on health gains by starting early in the process with a large increase in excise taxes on tobacco; (2) Attack affordability: follow up on the initial rate increase by recurrent hikes over time to outpace the GDP per capita growth; (3) Change expectations: let consumers know that a tax-rate increase is not just a one-off intervention but that prices will keep going up; (4) Tax based on quantity purchased rather than price paid: this will discourage smokers from switching to cheaper brands in an attempt to pay less tax because the cheaper brands would be taxed at the same rate; (5) Use soft earmarks to win support: earmarking taxes to increased health spending has helped generate grassroots support in several countries; (6) Engage in regional collaboration to boost results: this includes joint operations to fight cross-border threats like cigarette smuggling and seeking regional commitment to tobacco control; and (7) Build broad alliances: steps include mobilizing civil society, opinion leaders, and international partners as well as limiting lobby activities by the tobacco industry. (See Marquez and Moreno-Dodson 2017.) 7 By comparison, in high-income countries, only 25 percent of deaths occur from noncommunicable diseases before age 70. (See Task Force on Fiscal Policy for Health 2019.) 8 World Bank (2019) staff estimate that, in low- and middle-income countries, an excise tax increase that raises the prices of tobacco, alcohol and sugar-sweetened beverages by 50 percent would on average raise additional tax revenue equivalent to 0.7 percent of GDP. Similarly, the Task Force on Fiscal Policy for Health report (2019) estimates that raising the prices of these consumables by 50 percent could avert an estimated 50 million premature deaths worldwide over the next 50 years and raise US$20 trillion in new revenues. 9 ESMAP (Energy Sector Management Assistance Program), World Bank. 10 Social enterprises (SEs) are private organizations that use business methods to advance their social mission in a financially sustainable way. They focus on maximizing the long-term public good as opposed to maximizing short-term profits for their shareholders and private owners. Because of their strong presence and understanding of local communities, SEs are often able to reach the underserved through innovative solutions. 11 See Leaders’ Declaration: G20 Riyadh Summit” November 21-22, 2020. 12 See First G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting, February 26, 2021, G20 Leaders’ Summit 2021. 13 The World Bank already considers, as part of a country’s contribution to increasing its productive investment, a reduction of that country’s debt service if it is used to increase spending on human capital. In the area of development policy financing, the World Bank (2017) states: In order to provide a Bank Loan to the Member Country or a Bank Guarantee of the Member Country’s debt, for debt restructuring, the Bank needs to show that: (i) the reduction in debt service permitted by the operation is expected to be translated into increased productive domestic investment and thus enhance economic growth and development.... The policy defines “investment” broadly “to include spending not only for enlarging the productive basis of a country, but also for making it more productive” and includes “both physical and human capital, as well as spending which directly substitutes for future investment requirements, such as spending on improved operations and maintenance.” (See World Bank 2017.) 14 On sustainable finance, see International Capital Market Association (2021). 15 “The channels through which social spending may be macro-critical can be grouped into three, often interrelated, channels: Is social spending sustainably financed? Is it adequate? Is it efficient? A particular social spending issue is considered macro- critical if one, or any combination, of these channels is a policy concern” (IMF 2019). PROTECT AND INVEST in people 54 REFERENCES Adelman, Melissa, Renata Freitas Lemos, Reema Nayar, Andrews, Kathryn, Ciro Avitabile, and Roberta Gatti. 2019. and María José Vargas. Forthcoming. 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