Publication: Protecting the Vulnerable
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Published
2007-01-30
ISSN
1564-698X
Date
2012-03-30
Author(s)
Jack, William
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Abstract
In a risky world should governments provide public goods that reduce risk or compensate the victims of bad outcomes through social insurance? This article examines a basic question in designing social protection policies: how should a government allocate a fixed budget between these two activities? In the presence of income and risk heterogeneities a simple public insurance scheme that pays a fixed benefit to all households that suffer a negative shock is an effective redistributional instrument of public policy. This is true even when a well functioning private insurance market exists, and so the role of public insurance is not to correct a market failure. In fact, the existence of a private insurance market means that the public system has desirable targeting properties—all but the poor and high-risk take up private insurance. The provision of public goods that reduce risk for all should therefore be complemented with public insurance that (automatically) benefits those who are especially vulnerable.
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“Jack, William; Devarajan, Shantayanan. 2007. Protecting the Vulnerable. World Bank Economic Review. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4447 License: CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO.”
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