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ECLAC Supports Haiti in Implementing National Social Protection Policy

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) says it is supporting Haiti in implementing its National Policy for Social Protection and Promotion.

ECla“We at ECLAC continue to be available to support Haiti in forging a social protection system with a State vision and with a rights-based perspective placing equality at the center,” said Alberto Arenas de Mesa, ECLAC’s director of the Social Development Division, during an international seminar entitled “Haiti: The challenges of implementing the National Policy for Social Protection and Promotion (PNPPS)”, held in Port-au-Prince, the Haitian capital, using a hybrid format (in person and virtual). 

ECLAC said  it organized the event in conjunction with the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor (MAST) of Haiti, the Haiti office of the World Food Program (WFP) and the Embassy of Switzerland in Haiti, in the framework of the technical assistance and cooperation activities that the Commission has carried out with the ministry, since 2015, and with the WFP’s country office, since 2019, which culminated in the promulgation of the National Policy for Social Protection and Promotion in July 2020. 

According to ECLAC, the promulgation of the PNPPS is considered to be a major political and institutional advance, since “this instrument defines the strategic framework for the interventions needed to sustainably address priority tasks such as the eradication of poverty, the reduction of inequalities, and the promotion of all Haitians’ autonomy and rights.

As well as the other institutions, ECLAC says that it is now focused on supporting this policy’s effective implementation, in particular the drafting of action plans at a national and departmental level. 

The international seminar featured opening remarks by Pierre Ricot Odney, Minister of Social Affairs and Labor of Haiti; Marc-André Prost, Deputy Director of the World Food Program’s Haiti office; Fabrizio Poretti of the Swiss Embassy; and Alberto Arenas de Mesa from ECLAC. 

Also participating in the event were officials from the MAST and other Haitian entities; governmental representatives from Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Mexico, Peru and Uruguay; specialists from ECLAC and the WFP; and members of civil society and academia. 

In his remarks, Odney said he was convinced that the seminar would contribute to “identifying and very clearly addressing the distinct challenges related to implementation of the PNPPS, in order to achieve a coherent and effective social protection system.”

“On behalf of the government, and the MAST in particular, I want to express gratitude for the efforts made by the World Food Program and ECLAC, along with other United Nations agencies, which have supported us throughout this journey,” he said. 

Prost reiterated his institution’s commitment to the Haitian Government in strengthening institutional capacities in terms of social protection and promotion, and supporting the development of information systems to guide implementation of the PNPPS. 

“The World Food Program sees a strong link between its ‘zero hunger’ mandate for 2030 and social protection,” he said. “In fact, our overall strategy includes ‘increasing access to national social protection systems that safeguard and foster people’s ability to meet their food security and nutrition needs.’” 

Poretti warned that “Haiti’s sociopolitical and economic reality shows, today more than ever, the importance of strengthening initiatives and joint efforts to fight against extreme vulnerability, reducing inequalities and promoting access to basic social services” in the country. 

The international seminar held in Haiti is directly connected to the work of the Regional Conference on Social Development in Latin America and the Caribbean, a subsidiary body of ECLAC. 

In the context of this conference, ECLAC said that, in 2019, senior authorities from the region approved the Regional Agenda for Inclusive Social Development, a technical-political instrument that seeks to support implementation of the social dimension of the 2030 Agenda and that includes as one of its four axes, “regional cooperation and integration, to progress towards inclusive social development and achieve sustainable development.” 

“Latin America and the Caribbean,” said the director of ECLAC’s Social Development Division, “is a diverse region that shares numerous challenges, with high vulnerability to poverty and inequality and gaps in access and participation that especially affect certain populations.” 

ECLAC said the event in Port-au-Prince “precisely sought to bolster partnerships between the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor of Haiti and the Social Development Ministries of other countries in the region in order to move forward on building universal, comprehensive, sustainable and resilient social protection systems that would leave no one behind.”

“At this time in which the role of public policy and of the State is at the center of responses to global challenges, cooperation and multilateralism are more important than ever,” said Arenas de Mesa, emphasizing that, in the current context of crisis, “our region must not lose its bearings, preventing what is urgent from overriding what is important.” 

“This means that the growing social risks and uncertainties related to climate change, poverty, inequality, social unrest and dangers for the stability of our democracies must continue to be present and to be a priority in our actions,” he added. 

ECLAC said its technical assistance to the MAST began in 2015 with the holding of an international seminar entitled “Social Protection in Haiti: Towards the Development of a New Policy.”

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