Original HRC document

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Document Type: Final Report

Date: 2015 Dec

Session: 28th Regular Session (2015 Mar)

Agenda Item:

GE.3 Ibid. 4-24788 (E)



Human Rights Council Twenty-eighth session

Agenda items 2 and 3

Annual report of the United Nations High Commissioner

for Human Rights and reports of the Office

of the High Commissioner and the Secretary-General

Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,

political, economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to development

Report of the Secretary-General on the question of the realization in all countries of economic, social and cultural rights

Summary

The present report is submitted in accordance with resolution 25/11 of the Human

Rights Council, which called for a report with a special focus on the importance of social

protection floors for the realization of economic, social and cultural rights. The report

outlines the main characteristics of social protection floors and how they can contribute to

ensuring the enjoyment of minimum essential levels of economic, social and cultural rights,

reducing poverty and inequality.

Contents

Paragraphs Page

I. Introduction ............................................................................................................. 1–2 3

II. Social protection floors ........................................................................................... 3–ILO, “Social protection floor” (see note 6 above) and ILO Recommendation 202. 3

III. Human rights norms and principles and social protection floors ........................... 13–6 See, e.g., A/68/293, paras. 48–53. 5 5

A. The obligation of progressive realization ....................................................... 16–1 General comment No. 19, para. 23. 8 6

B. Minimum essential levels of economic, social and cultural rights ................. 19–23 6

C. Principles of transparency, participation and accountability .......................... 24–28 8

D. Equality between men and women ................................................................. 29–35 9

IV. Social protection floors and marginalized groups ................................................... 36–53 11

A. Children .......................................................................................................... 37–39 11

B. Older persons .................................................................................................. 40–6 Ibid., para. 5 (b). 3 12

C. Persons with disabilities.................................................................................. 44–5 ILO Recommendation 202, para. 4. 7 13

D. Informal workers ............................................................................................ 48–49 14

E. Non-nationals .................................................................................................. 50–53 14

V. Conclusions ............................................................................................................. 54–56 15

I. Introduction

1. In its resolution 25/11, the Human Rights Council requested the Secretary-General

to submit an annual report with a special focus on the importance of social protection floors

for the realization of economic, social and cultural rights (para. 16).

2. The report outlines the main features of social protection floors and how their

adoption, by States, can contribute to the enjoyment of minimum essential levels of

economic, social and cultural rights, reducing poverty and inequality. In that context, the

Social Protection Floor Initiative, led by the International Labour Organization (ILO) and

supported by all United Nations agencies, is pivotal in promoting basic income security and

access to health care, and in facilitating the enjoyment of several economic and social rights

by the most marginalized groups of the population.

II. Social protection floors

3. Events such as the surge in the late 1990s in innovative national programmes for

social protection in the global South1 and the 2008 financial and economic crisis2 have

gradually increased political support for the idea of Government-funded minimum social

protection floors. According to the Social Protection Floors Recommendation (ILO

Recommendation No. 202, adopted on 14 June 2012), social protection floors are nationally

defined sets of basic social security guarantees that should provide access to essential health

care and to basic income security for all those in need over the life cycle.

4. The ILO-led Social Protection Floor Initiative is a policy response to the limited

social security coverage worldwide. According to the ILO World Social Protection Report

2014/2015,3 73 per cent of the global population are either not covered, or only partially

covered, by comprehensive social security systems. The ILO report notes that 75 countries

have no child and family benefit programmes mandated by legislation, and the global

average spending on such programmes is only 0.4 per cent of gross domestic product

(GDP). Worldwide, employment injury, disability and maternity benefits and old-age

pension are also only available on a very limited basis.

5. In 2009, the United Nations System Chief Executives Board for Coordination

adopted the One United Nations Social Protection Floor Initiative as one of the nine United

Nations joint initiatives to cope with the global economic and financial crises.4 Within the

framework of the Social Protection Floor Initiative, the Social Protection Floor Advisory

1 Bolsa Familia and Brasil Sem Miséria in Brazil; Oportunidades in Mexico; Asignación Universal por

Hijo para Protección Social in Argentina; a social transfer scheme in Zambia; the National Rural

Employment Guarantee Scheme in India; the Productive Safety Nets programme in Ethiopia;

a universal pension scheme in Namibia; and the provision of universal health services in Thailand.

See Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, Philip Alston, report to the General

Assembly, A/69/297, para. 16.

2 See Bob Deacon, Global Social Policy in the Making: The Foundation of the Social Protection Floor

(Bristol, United Kingdom, Policy Press, 2013) and Julie L. Drolet, Social Protection and Social

Development: International Initiatives (Springer, 2014).

3 World Social Protection Report 2014/2015: Building economic recovery, inclusive development and

social justice (2014). Available from www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---dgreports/---

dcomm/documents/publication/wcms_245201.pdf.

4 The Initiative is co-led by ILO and the World Health Organization and involves 17 collaborating

agencies, including United Nations agencies, non-governmental organizations and international

financial institutions, inter alia the World Bank.

Group was created to enhance global advocacy activities and to develop the conceptual

policy aspects of the approach.

6. In 2011, the Social Protection Floor Advisory Group issued a report entitled Social

Protection Floor for a Fair and Inclusive Globalization,5 which consolidated global

advocacy activities around social protection. In 2012, at the 101st session of the

International Labour Conference, Governments, employers and workers from 185 countries

unanimously adopted ILO Recommendation No. 202. In that landmark recommendation,

social security as a human right for all persons is reaffirmed and guidance provided for

building comprehensive social security systems. Also in 2012, in the outcome document of

United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20), entitled “The Future

We Want”, adopted by the General Assembly in its resolution 66/288, States stressed “the

need to provide social protection to all members of society”, encouraged “initiatives aimed

at providing social protection floors for all citizens” and reaffirmed that sustainable

development and poverty eradication policies should promote “respect for all human

rights” (annex, paras. 156, 107 and 58, respectively).

7. ILO Recommendation No. 202 provides guidance to member States on how to

extend and adapt social protection floors to national circumstances. It states that national

social protection floors should include at least four essential guarantees:

(a) Access to at least essential health care, including maternity care;

(b) Basic income security for children, providing access to nutrition, education,

care and any other necessary goods and services;

(c) Basic income security for persons of working age who are unable to earn

sufficient income, in particular in cases of sickness, unemployment, maternity and

disability;

(d) Basic income security for older persons.

8. While the final objective is to put in place comprehensive social protection systems,

implementation can be gradual in line with States’ resources. Countries adopting a social

protection floor should develop nationally defined strategies, in a participatory manner,

respecting the principles of non-discrimination, gender equality and social inclusion.

Building on existing social protection mechanisms, those strategies may include a mix of

measures: contributory and non-contributory, targeted and universal, and public and private

— depending on the country’s social, economic and political context.

9. The results of ILO research and the experience of several developing countries show

that virtually all countries can afford social protection floors and that they would constitute

effective tools in the fight against poverty.6 General comment No. 19, para. 31.

10. Social protection floors differ from a “safety net” or “social safety nets” approaches,

which are non-contributory transfers designed to provide regular, predictable and targeted

support to poor and vulnerable people. In contrast, the aim of social protection floors is to

approach social policy comprehensively through the promotion of integrated strategies for

essential social services and income security for all.

5 ILO, Geneva, 2011. Available from www.ilo.org/global/publications/books/WCMS_165750/lang--

en/index.htm.

6 ILO, “Can Low Income Countries Afford Basic Social Security?”, Social Security Policy Briefing

Paper 3, 2008. Available from www.ilo.org/public/english/protection/secsoc/downloads/

policy/policy3e.pdf.

11. “Safety net approaches” do not offer wider social protection systems, but rather tend

to consist of isolated programmes, often fragmented and insufficiently coordinated. That

fragmentation makes it more difficult for individual rights-holders to identify who is

accountable for a programme’s implementation and may lead to gaps in coverage,

exclusion errors, or create risks of activities in one sector creating negative unforeseen

effects in another.7

12. The concept of the Social Protection Floor Initiative is based on shared principles of

social justice and refers to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International

Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights for the realization of the rights to social

security, adequate standard of living, health, education, food and housing.8 The Social

Protection Floor Initiative and human rights standards are complementary, as the first

provides the policy space while the latter provides the normative framework in which States

should develop social protection floors. While social protection floors represent States’

policy commitments, human rights norms translate into concrete rights for specific rights-

holders, and therefore into concrete legal obligations for States.

III. Human rights norms and principles and social protection floors

13. ILO Recommendation 202 lays down the guiding principles that should be observed

in creating national social protection floors. In its preamble, it reaffirms that the right to

social security is a human right and an important tool not only to “prevent and reduce

poverty, inequality, social exclusion and social insecurity” but also “to promote equal

opportunity and gender and racial equality”.

14. The preamble of ILO Recommendation 202 also explicitly mentions the Universal

Declaration of Human Rights (arts. 22 and 25) and the International Covenant on

Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (arts. 9, 11 and 12). The recommendation refers to a

number of human rights norms and principles, such as the universality of protection;

entitlements prescribed by law; non-discrimination, gender equality, responsiveness to

special needs; respect for the rights and dignity of people covered by the social security

guarantees; progressive realization; transparency and accountability; remedies; and respect

for the rights of collective bargain and freedom of association for all workers.

15. Those principles are drawn from States’ human rights obligations. The Committee

on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the authoritative interpretative body of rights and

obligations of the Covenant, in paragraph 2 of its general comment No. 19 (2007) on the

right to social security (art. 9) (hereinafter, general comment No. 19), clarified that the right

to social security encompasses the right to access benefits without discrimination in order to

secure protection from, inter alia, a lack of a work-related income due to sickness,

disability, maternity, employment injury, unemployment, old age or death of a family

member, unaffordable access to health care or insufficient family support. The Committee

further stresses that States must provide social protection to all individuals, guaranteeing

universal coverage, reasonable, proportionate and transparent eligibility criteria;

7 Joint report of the Independent Expert on the question of human rights and extreme poverty,

Magdalena Sepúlveda Carmona, and the Independent Expert on the issue of human rights obligations

related to access to safe drinking water and sanitation, Catarina de Albuquerque, A/HRC/15/55,

paras. 109–0 Report of the Independent Expert on the question of human rights and extreme poverty, A/64/279. 12.

8 ILO, “The right to social protection”. Available from www.social-protection.org/gimi/gess/

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affordability and physical accessibility by beneficiaries; and participation in and

information about the provision of benefits (ibid., paras. 23–26). The right to social security

should be enjoyed equally by men and women as outlined in article 2, paragraph 2 (on non-

discrimination), and article 3 (on the equal enjoyment of economic, social and cultural

rights) of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

A. The obligation of progressive realization

16. International human rights treaties provide for the progressive realization of

economic, social and cultural rights (art. 2, para. 1, of the International Covenant on

Economic, Social and Cultural Rights). The obligation of progressive realization requires

States parties not only to continuously improve conditions, but also prohibits any deliberate

retrogressive measure. There is a strong presumption that retrogressive measures are

prohibited under the Covenant,9 unless concerned States are able to prove that the measures

have been introduced after most careful consideration of all alternatives, and that they are

justified by reference to the totality of the rights stipulated in the Covenant.10 Everyone

should be covered by social security, in particular individuals belonging to the most

disadvantaged and marginalized groups.11 Each State party has to devise its own measures,

in accordance with its specific circumstances, including its financial resources, population,

geographic distribution of the population and natural resources.

17. Social protection floors demonstrate the need for progressive realization. While

ensuring that basic income security allows a life in dignity, each country should determine

the range of social security guarantees that will be encompassed in its national definition.12

National social protection floors should move progressively towards universal and basic

social protection for all, with a view to ensuring that no one falls below a certain income

level and that everyone has access to essential public services, such as water and sanitation,

health and education.13

18. Progressive realization in the implementation of national social protection floors

should not be interpreted as allowing States to delay implementing national social

protection floors. The implementation of higher standards of protection should be

envisaged immediately and, as much as possible, within the limits of a country’s fiscal and

administrative capacities. The objective of the social protection floor is to safeguard a

dignified existence for all.

B. Minimum essential levels of economic, social and cultural rights

19. According to the Covenant, State parties have a minimum core obligation to ensure

the satisfaction of, at the very least, minimum essential levels of all economic, social and

cultural rights, including the right to social security, as a matter of priority. General

comment No. 19 promotes the understanding that all States have a minimum core

obligation to provide some form of basic social security. This is an immediate obligation.

9 General comment No. 19, para. 42. See also report of the United Nations High Commissioner for

Human Rights on austerity measures and economic, social and cultural rights, E/2013/82, para. 15.

Thus, the fulfilment of minimum essential levels of economic, social and cultural rights is

not to be left to progressive realization.14

20. For a State party to be able to attribute its failure to meet at least its minimum core

obligations to a lack of available resources, it must demonstrate that every effort has been

made to use all resources that are at its disposal to fulfil, as a matter of priority, those

minimum obligations.15

21. Social protection floors could be seen as instrumental to satisfying that “minimum”.

Conversely, they should never be considered a ceiling for social protection. According to

ILO, the social protection floor is part of a two-dimensional strategy for the extension of

social security, comprising of a basic set of social guarantees for all (horizontal dimension),

and the gradual implementation of higher standards (vertical dimension).16

22. The minimum core content of the right to social security has been elaborated further.

In general comment No. 19, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights notes

that the realization of the right to social security implies that States must ensure that

benefits are adequate in amount and duration, and provided in a manner that complies with

human rights principles such as respect of human dignity and non-discrimination.17 That

requires that social protection programmes do not stigmatize beneficiaries, and avoid any

demeaning treatment during all phases of a programme.18 Those are also critical principles

in the implementation of national social protection floors. In giving effect to ILO

Recommendation 202, States should ensure the adequacy of benefits (para. 3 (c)). The

benefit levels should be established by law and regularly reviewed (para. 3 (c) and

para. 8 (c)). Additionally, the recommendation explicitly notes that in establishing social

protection floors States should demonstrate “respect for the rights and dignity of people

covered by the social security guarantees” (para. 3 (f)).

23. The minimum core content of rights, as contained in the Covenant and as further

clarified by human rights bodies, can also assist in defining the level of national social

protection floors.19 The social protection floor could be instrumental in achieving the

14 Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 3 (1990) on the nature of

States parties’ obligations, para. 10. “The Committee is of the view that a minimum core obligation to

ensure the satisfaction of, at the very least, minimum essential levels of each of the rights is

incumbent upon every State party. Thus, for example, a State party in which any significant number

of individuals is deprived of essential foodstuffs, of essential primary health care, of basic shelter and

housing, or of the most basic forms of education is, prima facie, failing to discharge its obligations

under the Covenant”.

15 See Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comments No. 3, para. 12; No. 12

(1999) on the right to adequate food (art. 11), para. 28; and No. 14 (2000) on the right to the highest

attainable state of health (art. 12), para. 18.

16 See ILO, Social Security for All: Building social protection floors and comprehensive social security

systems. The strategy of the International Labour Organization (Geneva, 2012), pp. 3–7 (available

from www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_protect/---

soc_sec/documents/publication/wcms_secsoc_34188.pdf ) and Social Protection Floor Advisory

Group, Social Protection Floor, p. xxiii.

17 General comment No. 19, para. 22.

18 See Magdalena Sepúlveda Carmona, “From Undeserving Poor to Rights Holder: A Human Rights

Perspective on Social Protection Systems”, Development Pathways, Working Paper No. 1 (Banbury,

United Kingdom, 2014).

19 According to general comment No. 14 of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, for

example, the right to the highest standard of physical and mental health (art. 12 of the International

Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights) imposes on States a set of core obligation

including “(a) to ensure the right of access to health facilities, goods and services on a non-

discriminatory basis, especially for vulnerable or marginalized groups; (b) to ensure access to the

minimum core content of the rights to social security and health, and — through

guaranteeing basic security income — to other economic and social rights such as the rights

to food, housing and water.

C. Principles of transparency, participation and accountability

24. In its general comment No. 19, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural

Rights has recommended that transparency be integral to national social security

programmes and plans of action, and that the beneficiaries participate in the administration

of social protection programmes.20 Similarly, the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty

and human rights noted that transparency must be a fundamental element of all aspects of

social protection programmes, including selection methods, eligibility criteria, benefits

level, and complaints and redress mechanisms.21 Further, the Special Rapporteur has noted

that civil society should participate in the design, implementation and monitoring of social

protection programmes.22

25. Under international human rights law, access to information is a right in itself and a

prerequisite to ensuring participation in public affairs and accountability.23 Consequently,

human rights bodies have noted that social security systems must ensure respect for the

right of individuals and organizations to seek, receive and impart information on all social

security entitlements in a clear and transparent manner.24

26. ILO Recommendation 202 explicitly refers to transparent, accountable and sound

financial management and administration (para. 3 (j)) and denotes a number of important

elements in that regard. For example, when formulating and implementing national social

security strategies, States should raise awareness about the strategies and put in place

information programmes (para. 14 (f)). ILO Recommendation 202 also specifies that

national social security strategies should be formulated and implemented on the basis of

national consultations through effective social dialogue and participation (para. 13). Other

ILO instruments also stress the importance of participation.25

minimum essential food which is nutritionally adequate and safe, to ensure freedom from hunger to

everyone; (c) to ensure access to basic shelter, housing and sanitation, and an adequate supply of safe

and potable water; (d) to provide essential drugs, as from time to time defined under the WHO Action

Programme on Essential Drugs; (e) to ensure equitable distribution of all health facilities, goods and

services; (f) to adopt and implement a national public health strategy and plan of action, on the basis

of epidemiological evidence, addressing the health concerns of the whole population; the strategy and

plan of action shall be devised, and periodically reviewed, on the basis of a participatory and

transparent process; they shall include methods, such as right to health indicators and benchmarks,

by which progress can be closely monitored; the process by which the strategy and plan of action are

devised, as well as their content, shall give particular attention to all vulnerable or marginalized

groups.”

20 See general comment No.19, paras. 70 and 26.

21 The Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights has assessed the practical implications

of those principles in several reports, which clarify the technical requirements with which social

protection systems should comply. See, e.g., A/65/259, paras. 88–93.

22 See, e.g., reports of the Special Rapporteur on the question of human rights and extreme poverty,

A/HRC/11/9, pp. 7–9; A/64/279, pp. 14–18; A/HRC/14/31, pp. 11–19; and A/HRC/17/34, pp. 6–12.

23 See, for example, International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, art. 19; African Charter on

Human and Peoples’ Rights, art. 9; American Convention on Human Rights, art. 13; and European

Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 10.

24 General comment No. 19, para. 26. See also A/HRC/11/9, pp. 8–17; and A/HRC/14/31 pp. 11–19.

25 Articles 71 and 72 of ILO Convention No. 102 (1952) on Minimum Standards of Social Security set

out similar requirements.

27. That is consistent with the recommendations of the Committee on Economic, Social

and Cultural Rights that participation should be an integral part of any policy or programme

concerning social security.26 Participation not only contributes to the effective

implementation and sustainability of national social protection floors, but also ensures that

the rights of beneficiaries are respected. For example, the successful implementation of the

Universal Health Coverage Scheme in Thailand has been attributed to, among other

reasons, the critical role played by civil society and social movements in its formulation and

design.27

28. According to ILO Recommendation 202, national social protection floors should

also put in place “impartial, transparent, effective, simple, rapid accessible and inexpensive

complaint and appeal procedures”. The recommendation underlines that such procedures

should be free of charge for the applicant (para. 7). This is in line with general comment

No. 19 in which the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights recommends that

all victims of violations of the right to social security be entitled to adequate reparation,

including restitution, compensation, satisfaction or guarantees of non-repetition. National

ombudspersons, human rights commissions and similar national human rights institutions

should have a role in addressing violations of the right (paras. 77–81).

D. Equality between men and women

29. The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has noted in its general

comment No. 19 that States parties should ensure that social protection guarantees do not

reinforce traditional gender stereotypes, but rather encourage behaviour that advances

equality between men and women (para. 32).28 Social security programmes should address

imbalances of power and the multiple forms of discrimination that women experience, and

address women’s specific needs throughout their lives: during adolescence, adulthood and

old age.29

30. In its preamble, ILO Recommendation 202 recognizes that social security is an

important tool to promote gender equality. It emphasizes that, in implementing the

recommendation, States should apply the principle of gender equality and be responsive to

women’s special needs (para. 3 (d)). It also specifies the critical role of gender-

disaggregated data for the effective monitoring of the floors (paras. 19 and 21). Moreover,

several of the basic guarantees that national social protection floors should establish, such

as maternal health, child care and maternity benefits (para. 5 (a), (b) and (c)), aim in

particular at ensuring gender equality and women’s enjoyment of rights.

31. Many social protection schemes specifically target women within households or

female-headed households,30 as it is widely understood that targeting women as recipients

of social protection benefits significantly improves the education, health and nutritional

26 General comment No. 19, para. 69.

27 ILO, “Fiscal Space and the Extension of Social Protection”, Extension of Social Security Working

Paper 33 (Geneva, 2012), p. 154.

28 Ibid., para. 32.

29 See, e.g., A/HRC/11/9, p. 17, and A/65/259, pp. 14–18. See also Sepúlveda, M. and Nyst, C., The

Human Rights Approach to Social Protection (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Finland, Erweko Oy,

2012), pp. 32–33.

30 For the Brazilian Bolsa Família, for instance, 94 per cent of the recipients are women: Rebecca Holmes, Nicola Jones, Rosana Vargas and Fabio Veras Soares, “Cash Transfers and Gendered Risks

and Vulnerabilities: Lessons from Latin America,” International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth

Research Brief No. 16 (2010), p. 2.

levels of children.31 However, channelling social protection through women alone does not

eradicate the causes of gender inequality.32 From discriminatory legal frameworks to

persistent discriminatory social norms, there are many underlying causes that prevent

women from benefiting from social protection interventions or accessing social services in

an equal manner to men. If the differences between men and women are not taken into

account throughout the design, implementation and evaluation of a social protection

intervention, there is a serious risk that the intervention will have the unintended effect of

exacerbating inequalities.

32. Demands of unpaid care work often force women into informal jobs with precarious

employment status, no access to social insurance benefits such as paid maternity leave,

unemployment insurance or pensions, and often unsafe and unhealthy working conditions.33

Even when women manage to combine unpaid care work with formal-sector employment,

they are likely to have lower social insurance contributions than men, owing to lower wages

and “interrupted” work histories as a result of child-rearing or other unpaid care work.

33. The unequal distribution, intensity and lack of recognition and support of unpaid

care work undermines the dignity and autonomy of women caregivers and obstructs their

enjoyment of several human rights — including civil, economic, political, social and

cultural rights — on an equal basis with men.34 For example, unpaid care work has an

impact on women’s and girls’ rights to education, work, social security and participation, as

well as to rest and leisure. Systematically unequal distribution of care work and household

tasks between women and men also raises concerns in terms of the right to equality and

non-discrimination and the obligations of States in that regard.

34. Human rights treaties require States parties to take measures to ensure unpaid care

work does not hamper women’s equal enjoyment of the right to social security.35 Thus,

social insurance and social assistance programmes must take into account women’s unequal

burden of unpaid care work.36 For example, States must put in place social insurance

schemes that take into account factors, including child-rearing periods, which prevent

women from making equal contributions.

31 See Nicola Jones, Rebecca Holmes and Jessica Espey, Gender and the MDGs, Briefing Paper No. 42 (London, Overseas Development Institute, 2008).

32 See Sarojini Ganju Thakur, Catherine Arnold and Tina Johnson, Gender and Social Protection, Paper No. 167 (Paris, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2009). Available from

www.oecd.org/dataoecd/26/34/43280899.pdf (accessed in December 2014). See also M. Davies,

DFID Social transfers Evaluation Summary Report, Research Report No. 60 (Sussex, Institute for

Development Studies, 2009).

33 See ILO, Women, Gender and the Informal Economy: An Assessment of ILO Research and Suggested

Ways Forward (2008).

34 See report of the former Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, Magdalena

Sepúlveda Carmona, on unpaid care work and enjoyment of rights, A/68/293.

35 See article 3 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant

on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of

Discrimination against Women on the principle of equality between men and women, article 11 of the

International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights on the right to an adequate standard

of living, article 11 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against

Women on women’s right to work and equal opportunities, article 10 of that Convention on women’s

right to education, article 12 of that Convention on women’s right to health, article 13 of that

Convention on women’s right to participate in recreational activities, sports and all aspects of cultural

life.

35. Under human rights law, States parties must ensure that women and men have an

equal right to family benefits.37 All women, including those working in the informal sector,

should be granted paid maternity leave and benefits for an adequate period, and States must

take steps, to the maximum of their available resources, to ensure that social security

systems cover persons working in the informal economy.38 According to ILO, only 28 per

cent of women in employment worldwide are covered by maternity benefits.39 ILO

Recommendation 202 explicitly includes maternal benefits, which are vital, not only to

promote equality in employment and occupation, but also in ensuring income security for

pregnant women and mothers of newborn children and their families, and effective access

to quality maternal health care. Without maternity protection, women’s right to health and

the health of the newborn are compromised, as women are forced to work until the last days

of their pregnancy and resume working soon after childbirth.

IV. Social protection floors and marginalized groups

36. While all persons should progressively be covered by social security systems,

human rights law prescribes that priority should be accorded to the most disadvantaged and

marginalized groups.40 Human rights bodies have repeatedly called for the extension of

social security guarantees to vulnerable and disadvantaged groups such as orphans and

children with street connections,41 victims of trafficking,42 minorities43 and internally

displaced persons.44 Accordingly, national social protection floors aim at guaranteeing

income security and access to basic services throughout the life cycle, with particular

attention to the most vulnerable and disadvantaged.45

A. Children

37. Under the Convention on the Rights of the Child, States parties must promote and

protect all children’s rights including their economic, social and cultural rights including

the right to social security (art. 26) and the right to an adequate standard of living (art. 27).

A national social protection floor should fulfil basic income security for children in order to

provide access to nutrition, education, care and any other necessary goods and services.46

38. To maximize the impact on the enjoyment of rights, social protection policies should

be child sensitive: addressing the unique social disadvantages, risks and vulnerabilities that

37 See e.g., Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, art. 13 (a).

38 See, e.g., general comment No. 19, paras. 18, 19 and 34, and A/68/293, para. 53.

39 ILO, World Social Protection Report, p. 60.

40 General comment No. 19, para. 23, and Guiding Principles on Extreme Poverty and Human Rights,

adopted in Human Rights Council resolution 21/11.

41 See, e.g., Committee on the Rights of the Child, concluding observations on Andorra,

CRC/C/AND/CO/2.

42 See, e.g., Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, concluding observations on Bosnia

and Herzegovina, E/C.12/BIH/CO/2.

43 See, e.g., report of the independent expert on minority issues, Gay McDougall, mission to Rwanda,

A/HRC/19/56/Add.1.

44 See, e.g., report of the representative of the Secretary-General on the human rights of internally

displaced persons, Walter Kälin, mission to Bosnia and Herzegovina, E/CN.4/2006/71/Add.4.

children may be born into or acquire later in childhood owing to external circumstances.47

Child-sensitive social protection also means reaching out to especially vulnerable groups of

children, including orphaned children, children affected by HIV/AIDS, children with

disabilities, migrant children, children from marginalized ethnic minorities and indigenous

groups and other economically and socially excluded groups.48

39. Cash transfers directed at families with small children have often contributed to the

realization of children’s right to health by increasing immunization, regular medical check-

ups and reducing the risk of child mortality. According to evaluations of the Juntos scheme

of Peru, that cash transfer programme conditional on prenatal and postnatal visits led to an

increase of approximately 65 per cent in such visits to health clinics, and a reduction in

home births in areas where there were high levels of maternal mortality.49 Similarly, food

transfers can be a valuable component of a broader approach to ensuring the right to food.50

Old-age pensions also appear to have positive impacts on the lives of children.51 Some

positive impacts in the enjoyment of the right to education have also been shown. For

example, data compiled by the World Bank indicates that conditional cash transfers had

positive effects on school enrolment and attendance, and that they occasionally helped to

reduce the gender gap in school enrolment.52 Social protection guarantees can also prevent

and reduce child labour.53 Evidence from Latin America suggests that greater access to

unemployment and disability benefits directly reduces the prevalence of child labour.54

B. Older persons

40. Income security in old age was recognized as a fundamental human right by the

Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 (arts. 22 and 25). In its general comment

No. 19, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights explicitly notes that States

cannot rely solely on contributory systems for old-age pensions, as many individuals work

in the informal sector, as unpaid carers in the household, or are unable to meet the level of

contributions required to obtain social security benefits. States must therefore consider the

establishment of a non-contributory pension system (para. 15). States parties to the

International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights should, within the limits

of available resources, provide non-contributory old-age benefits to assist, at the very least,

all older persons who, when reaching the retirement age, are not entitled to an old-age

insurance-based pension.

47 See Department for International Development, United Kingdom, HelpAge International, Hope and

Homes for Children, Institute of Development Studies, ILO, Overseas Development Institute, Save

the Children UK, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), United Nations Development

Programme (UNDP) and the World Bank, Advancing Child-Sensitive Social Protection (2009).

48 See, e.g., CRC/C/AND/CO/2 and A/HRC/11/9, paras. 73–83.

49 Armando Barrientos and Miguel Niño-Zarazúa, The effects of non-contributory social transfers in

developing countries: A Compendium (ILO, Geneva, 2010), p. 9.

50 See Armando Barrientos, Rebecca Holmes and James Scott, Social Assistance in Developing

Countries Database (Manchester, Brooks World Poverty Institute, The University of Manchester, and

the Overseas Development Institute, 2006).

51 Mark Gorman, Age and Security: How social pensions can deliver effective aid to poor older people

and their families (London, HelpAge International, 2004), p. 32.

52 Ariel Fiszbein and Norber Schady, “Conditional Cash Transfers: reducing present and future

poverty”, World Bank Policy Research Report No. 47603 (2009), chap. V.

53 See ILO, World Report on Child Labour: Economic vulnerability, social protection and the fight

against child labour (Geneva, 2013).

54 F.C. Rosati, A. Cigno and Z. Tzannatos, “Child Labor Handbook”, Social Protection Discussion

Paper No. 0206 (Washington, D.C., World Bank, 2002).

41. According to ILO Recommendation 202, national social protection floors should,

among its minimum components, at least guarantee basic income security in old age (para.

5 (d)). By doing so, national social protection floors have the potential to help reduce older

persons’ vulnerabilities, enabling them to enjoy their rights.

42. Without income security, older persons, particularly older women, are at increased

risk of seeing their rights violated. As the proportion of older women outnumbers that of

older men, universal pension systems might be the most gender-sensitive response. Gender

discrimination might limit the ability of women to influence decision-making processes

and, as a result, exclude them from being beneficiaries of targeted pensions. In universal

schemes, men and women receive the same level of benefits irrespective of their years in

the formal labour market, thus recognizing the contributions women make in unpaid work

such as caregiving. In developing countries, universal pensions may be the only means by

which most women can guarantee income in old age.

43. Ensuring basic income security in old age is closely linked to programmes on the

right to the highest attainable standard of health by older persons.55 Expenses for health care

and medicines may account for as much as three quarters of the income of the poorest

groups.56 Under those circumstances, the positive impact of social protection guarantees on

older persons’ standards of living can be nullified by the burden of health-care-related

costs.57 For that reason, there should be coordination between programmes aiming to ensure

basic income security and programmes aiming to ensure the right to health.

C. Persons with disabilities

44. The principle of non-discrimination in international human rights law obliges States

to ensure that persons with disabilities enjoy all their rights on an equal basis with others,

including their rights to social security and an adequate standard of living. The Convention

on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities requires States parties to ensure access of persons

with disabilities to social protection and poverty reduction programmes, and the right of

those living in poverty and their families to have access to assistance from the State with

disability-related expenses (art. 28).58

45. The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has specified the content

of the right to social security regarding persons with disabilities. It has noted that States

should ensure adequate income support to persons with disabilities who, owing to disability

or disability-related factors, have lost or seen their income reduced or have been denied

employment opportunities.59 It noted that such income support should reflect the special

needs for assistance associated with disability and should also cover individuals, often

women, who undertake the care of persons with disabilities.Ibid., para. 28.

55 See, e.g., thematic study on right to health of older persons of the Special Rapporteur on the right of

everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, Anand

Grover, A/HRC/18/37.

56 See J. Randel et al. (eds.), The Ageing and Development Report: Poverty, independence and the

world’s older people (HelpAge International, 1999).

57 A/HRC/14/31, paras. 90–94.

58 Regional treaties, such as the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (art. 18, para. 4) and the

Additional Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights in the Area of Economic, Social

and Cultural Rights (art. 18) have specific clauses regarding the rights of persons with disabilities.

59 Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 5 (1994) on persons with

disabilities, para. 28.

46. The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women has noted that

States parties must take special measures to ensure that women with disabilities have equal

access to health services and social security.61 Human rights bodies have further called on

States to undertake studies and research in order to identify the situation and specific

requirements in particular of women with disabilities, with a view to elaborating and

adopting social protection strategies to promote their autonomy and full participation in

society, and to combat violence against women.62

47. National social protection floors aiming at the inclusion and participation of persons

with disabilities could play a critical role in enabling States to comply with their obligations

regarding the rights of persons with disabilities. In 87 countries, non-contributory benefits

for persons with disabilities enable them to have a minimum level of income security.63

D. Informal workers

48. People working in the informal sector of the economy often lack social protection

and, as noted above, that affects women in particular. Traditionally, States have privileged

the establishment of contributory systems with the objective of achieving universal

coverage of the formal sector.

49. Human rights treaty bodies have called upon States parties to take effective

measures to ensure that informal workers are able to exercise their labour rights and their

right to social security without discrimination.64 Obligations to extend social security to

informal workers are in line with the objective of ILO Recommendation 202. Social

security systems and their components should be universal, based on social solidarity,

aiming at social inclusion, including persons in the informal economy.65

E. Non-nationals

50. Under international human rights law, States should progressively ensure all

economic, social and cultural rights including the right to social security, for all individuals

within their territories, providing specific protection for disadvantaged and vulnerable

individuals and groups.66 The International Convention on the Protection and Rights of All

Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families regulates the rights of migrant workers

and members of their families including the rights to social security (art. 27), health

(art. 28) and education (art. 30). Migrant workers also enjoy all the rights contained under

61 Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, general recommendation No. 18

(1991) on disabled women.

62 See, for example, Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, concluding observations on

Tunisia, CRPD/C/TUN/CO/1, and Spain, CRPD/C/ESP/CO/1.

63 ILO, World Social Protection Report, p. xxiii.

64 See, e.g., Committee on the Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, concluding observations on

Paraguay, E/C.12/PRY/CO/3; Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women,

concluding observations on Bosnia and Herzegovina, CEDAW/C/BIH/CO/4-5, and on Djibouti,

CEDAW/C/DJI/CO/1-3. The Guiding Principles on Extreme Poverty and Human Rights explicitly

call on States to “take specific measures to ensure that persons living in poverty, in particular women

and those working in the informal economy, have access to social security benefits, including social

pensions, which are sufficient to ensure an adequate standard of living and access to health care for

them and their families” (principle 86 (c)).

65 See ILO, Social Security for All, p. 4.

other human rights instruments. Those obligations extend to documented and

undocumented migrants, refugees and asylum seekers.67

51. Refugees and asylum seekers require protective measures.68 Additionally, States

parties to the Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, with few exceptions, must

accord refugees the same treatment as nationals with regard to social security guarantees

(art. 24). The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, in its general comment

No. 14 (2000) on the right to health, has noted that States should ensure equal access for all

persons, including asylum seekers and undocumented migrants, to preventive, curative and

palliative health services (para. 34).

52. At the domestic level, there have been landmark decisions extending social security

guarantees to non-nationals. For example, the Constitutional Court of South Africa and the

Federal Constitutional Court of Germany have emphasized that the principle of non-

discrimination applies to the enjoyment of the right to social security by migrants and

asylum seekers.69 In interpreting the European Social Charter, the European Committee of

Social Rights has consistently found national practices that exclude non-nationals —

particularly through residency and qualifying period requirements — to violate the rights to

social security and social assistance.70

53. ILO Recommendation 202 affirms that, subject to their existing international

obligations, States should provide the basic social security guarantees to at least all

residents and children (para. 6). The reference to “existing international obligations” is

critical as States parties to human rights treaties such as the International Covenant on

Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the Rights of the Child or the

Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities are obliged to extend the social

protection floor without distinction of any kind to everyone within the territory or under

their jurisdiction. Any differentiation in treatment between legally recognized residents and

others must comply with the principle of non-discrimination (e.g. art. 2, para. 2, of the

International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights). Hence, if a State seeks to

distinguish between legal residents and others in the enjoyment of the right to social

security, the differentiation must be reasonable, proportional, objective and with a

legitimate aim.71

V. Conclusions

54. Social protection floors have great potential in facilitating the enjoyment of

several economic and social, including the rights to social security, health, food,

67 See, e.g., report of the Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest

attainable standard of physical and mental health, Anand Grover, on migrant workers’ right to health

A/HRC/23/41.

68 See, for example, Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, concluding observations on

Germany, E/1999/22, paras. 316 and 327; on Sweden, E/1996/22, para. 137; and on Denmark,

E/2000/22, paras. 99 and 105.

69 See Khosa and Others v. Minister of Social Development and Mahlaule and another v. Minister of

Social Development, 2004 (6) BCLR 569 (CC), and German Federal Constitutional Court, Press

Office, “Provisions governing cash benefits provided for in the Asylum Seekers Benefits Act held

unconstitutional”, press release No. 56/2012 of 18 July 2012.

70 Conclusions on the application by Luxembourg of the European Social Charter, in particular

article 13, paragraph 4.

71 See Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 20 (2009) on non-

discrimination in economic, social and cultural rights (art. 2, para. 2, of the International Covenant on

Economic, Social and Cultural Rights).

housing, education and water, in accordance with the obligations of States under

international human rights law. As described above, when used as a floor and not a

ceiling for protection, social protection floors can contribute significantly to gender

equality and the realization of minimum essential levels of the rights to social security,

food, health and education, especially for marginalized groups.

55. Human rights norms and social protection floors complement each other. The

success of national social protection floors in achieving gender equality, respect for the

minimum core of economic, social and cultural rights and protecting marginalized

groups, such as children, older persons, persons with disabilities, informal workers

and non-nationals, will depend on whether they are established and implemented

according to human rights standards and principles.

56. The Social Protection Floor Initiative offers relevant policy guidance to put in

practice several human rights obligations, including the realization of comprehensive

social security systems. The Secretary-General therefore encourages States to consider

putting in place comprehensive social protection systems and social protection floors

that will contribute to the enjoyment and realization of human rights at national level.