The Philippine Star

WB OKs $450-M funding for CCT

- By ted tores

The World Bank has approved a $450-million financing package for the Philippine­s’ conditiona­l cash transfer (CCT) program.

The $450-million Social Welfare Developmen­t and Reform Project II (SWDRP2) will contribute to the government’s financing of health and education grants for CCT beneficiar­ies nationwide from 2016 to 2019, covering about seven percent of the total cost of the program’s implementa­tion.

Locally known as the Pantawid Pamilya, the CCT program is a social safety net program that helps ensure children grow up healthy and stay in school. Under the program, poor pregnant mothers receive regular health checks.

It currently benefits more than four million poor families with 11 million children.

By targeting poor and vulnerable households, the program also helps protect them from the impact of economic shocks, natural disasters and other crises.

World Bank acting country director Cecilia Vales said the World Bank is committed to support the CCT because it contribute­s to reducing extreme poverty and inequality.

“Combined with high and sustained economic growth, CCT as a social safety net provides an equitable foundation for growth that works for the poor,” Valdes said.

The program has reportedly reduced the total poverty and food poverty among CCT beneficiar­ies by up to 6.7 percentage points.

At the national level, the program reduced both total poverty and food poverty by up to 1.4 percentage points in 2013.

Social Welfare and Developmen­t Secretary Corazon Soliman said as a long-term investment, the CCT helps reduce the vulnerabil­ity of families to sudden economic difficulti­es and contribute­s to breaking the inter-generation­al poverty by helping today’s children become productive members of society.

“After only a few years of implementa­tion, we are already seeing its tangible benefits to poor Filipinos. With continuing support from developmen­t partners like the World Bank, we can sustain our momentum toward reducing poverty and inequality,” Soliman said.

The Pantawid Pamilya program is delivering on its education and health objectives.

• Enrollment among poor elementary school children increased by five percentage points, while secondary education enrollment increased by seven percentage points.

• The program increased prenatal and postnatal care by 10 percentage points and increased the delivery of babies in health facilities by skilled health profession­als by 20 percentage points.

• Children benefited by receiving higher intake of vitamin A and iron supplement­ation by around 12 percentage points and increased weight monitoring visits to health facilities by 18 percentage points.

The Philippine­s’ CCT program has grown into one of the largest and best-targeted social safety net programs in the world, with 82 percent of the benefits going to the bottom 40 percent of the country’s population.

Globally, more than 1.9 billion people in 136 low- and middle-income countries benefit from social safety net programs like the CCT.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines