Recovery, Renewal, Resilience

Lessons for Resilience

Consider if social protection programmes are disability-inclusive
Topic:
Economic
Keywords:
Economic strategy
Content:

People with disabilities are more likely to be unemployed or not in education or training, which makes them more vulnerable to the impacts of the pandemic, including increased risk of poverty. Recovery strategies to address the economic impacts of the pandemic should be disability-inclusive. Consider:

  • Review/amend social protection systems to better protect people with disabilities during COVID-19:
    • Raise poverty thresholds to take disability-related additional costs into account
    • Revise the definition of disability in assessment procedures, to ensure they are functioning-based rather than impairment-based
    • Train volunteer community members to support the rapid identification of people with disabilities for social protection or other assistance: these community volunteers are sometimes called 'key informants' (KIs), are knowledgeable about the topic, the local area and the people who live there
  • Ensure application procedures for social protection programmes and support services are accessible in the light of COVID-19 social distancing regimes:
    • Include disabled people's organisations when reviewing the accessibility of application processes and when disseminating information about support programmes
    • Adapt application and enrolment procedures to support the inclusion of people with disabilities
    • Provide disability training to programme staff and volunteers, e.g. disability awareness
    • Ensure programme information and application materials are available in a variety of accessible formats, e.g. Braille/videos/simplified text
    • Establish COVID-safe community-based registration services to bring services closer to people, and offer person/home-based assessment procedures for those with mobility limitations
  • Ensure methods to deliver social protection services and welfare payments are accessible:
    • Allow welfare payments to be paid electronically or enable people with mobility difficulties to nominate a trusted individual to collect their
    • Ensure service points are physically accessible and within the person's local community
  • Ensure employment schemes are adequate and accessible for people with disabilities during COVID-19:
    • Set up employment schemes to actively employ persons with disabilities, integrating such schemes into broader employment recovery schemes, e.g. green recovery
    • Make infrastructure accessible, e.g. buildings and workplaces
    • Introduce unemployment insurance to cover the informal sector, as people with disabilities, in particular women with disabilities, are more likely to be employed in the informal sector where there is an absence of job security, unemployment insurance and paid sick leave
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Consider strategies to manage and mitigate the rise in black markets for negative COVID-19 tests
Topic:
Economic
Keywords:
Economic strategy
Content:

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues on, people around the world have been utilising black markets to purchase negative COVID-19 test results to enable them to travel. False negative COVID test certificates have been sold for around $300 USD. Systems which email test results can be easily bypassed by downloading and doctoring documents e.g. changing the date of the test, name and test result. Consider how to manage and mitigate proliferation of false negative test results:

  • In Hawaii, only results from approved testing partners will be accepted, and they must be transmitted digitally, rather than using emails
  • Utilising apps that centralize health and lab data and test/vaccination results e.g. CommonPass, trialled by United Airlines and Cathay Pacific Airways
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Consider how to utilise the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as a foundation for economic recovery and renewal
Topic:
Economic
Keywords:
Economic strategy
Content:

The SDGs, represent the world's agreed economic, social, and environmental targets for 2030, and can act as a common scorecard to ensure there are objective standards for assessing progress. Localising the ambition of the SDGs to develop local economic development strategies can help integrate social and environmental standards within local economic agendas, reduce disparities between regions, generate local business opportunities and jobs, and aim to include all marginalized communities. Consider how the SDG framework can support inclusive and diversified economic growth:

  • Integrate SDG targets into on-going budget reviews process, thereby improving resource allocation and performance evaluation
  • Examine the link between ongoing public policies, the SDG targets and budget expenditures
  • Analyse the official indicators related to budget-planning instruments
  • Partner with the private sector to launch impact investment initiatives that address the SDGs, recovery and renewal from COVID-19 and sustainable economic renewal
Source link(s):

Consider how to support small retailers and protect them from the impacts of COVID-19 through strengthening digital capacities
Topic:
Economic
Keywords:
Economic strategy
Content:

Many smaller retailers have less digital capabilities, and it is these skills which can help smaller business survive the pandemic. The loss of smaller retailers will inhibit the economic recovery at the local and national level. Consider how to encourage partnerships between larger and smaller companies to help accelerate digital transformation for small business owners:

  • Offer digital solutions to support infrastructure development of small business to establish brands via mobile apps and digital menu applications for consumers. Additionally, develop simple online supply platforms for small and medium-sized business e.g. Menu in Brazil and MiMercado in Mexico
  • Encourage financial inclusion through affordable financial products and services. Consideration may be given to the development of local fintech services and partnerships that extend credit to small retailers to help save businesses and make them more competitive
  • Encourage collaborative platforms to share knowledge between well-established, experienced companies and vulnerable business e.g. Movimento Nós in Brazil an initiative created by eight of the main food and beverage companies in the country (Coca-Cola, Heineken, Nestlé etc.) to help 300,000 small businesses employing one million people, to get through COVID-19 and guarantee their reopening when possible. This will support the recovery of smaller supply chains and encourage customers and suppliers, which in turn will continue to have a positive impact on global supply chain recovery
Source link(s):