Development and
Cooperation

Human rights

Social protection for all

Social protection is a basic human right set out in the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Workers in the formal sector often enjoy health insurance and pension plans: a seamstress in Bangladesh. sb
Workers in the formal sector often enjoy health insurance and pension plans: a seamstress in Bangladesh.

Moreover, many countries – including Kenya, Zimbabwe and South Africa, for example – have enshrined it in their constitutions, as Markus Kaltenborn, a law professor at Ruhr University Bochum, recently pointed out during a conference hosted by the Development and Peace Foundation (Stiftung Entwicklung und Frieden – SEF) in Potsdam.

There are various models for social protection. Government-run health and unemployment insurances are typically based on compulsory contributions (“payroll taxes”) that are paid per formally employed person. Systems of this kind obviously depend on a company being registered and paying takes. Private-sector insurance policies are an option too, but they are normally prohibitively expensive. In some cases, according to Kaltenborn, government authorities step in to pay payroll taxes for people who work in the informal sector so they are covered by government-run insurances. (sb)

 

Related Articles

Beneficiaries of Zanzibar’s universal social pension in 2018.

Ageing and social protection

Africa’s demographic transition

Latest Articles

Press conference in Brussels in late February: The president of the European Commission, Senegal and France: Ursula von der Leyen, Macky Sall and Emmanuel Macron.
Local newspaper in Chad – the country is heavily in debt.

Global debt governance

Escaping from the debt trap

Mining & Fisheries

Casting a wide net

Most viewed articles