Publications

Working Paper No. 671 | May 2011

Public Job-creation Programs: The Economic Benefits of Investing in Social Care

Case Studies in South Africa and the United States

This paper demonstrates the strong impacts that public job creation in social care provisioning has on employment creation. Furthermore, it shows that mobilizing underutilized domestic labor resources and targeting them to bridge gaps in community-based services yield strong pro-poor income growth patterns that extend throughout the economy. Social care provision also contributes to promoting gender equality, as women—especially from low-income households—constitute a major workforce in the care sector. We present the ex-ante policy simulation results from two country case studies: South Africa and the United States. Both social accounting matrix–based multiplier analysis and propensity ranking–based microsimulation provide evidence of the pro-poor impacts of the social care expansion.


Publication Highlight

Working Paper No. 1045
Social Security and Gender Inequality
Author(s): Liudmila Malyshava, B. Oak McCoy
March 2024

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