A political blog about Bahamian politics in The Bahamas, Bahamian Politicans - and the entire Bahamas political lot. Bahamian Blogger Dennis Dames keeps you updated on the political news and views throughout the islands of The Bahamas without fear or favor. Bahamian Politicians and the Bahamian Political Arena: Updates one Post at a time on Bahamas Politics and Bahamas Politicans; and their local, regional and international policies and perspectives.
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Less than 17 per cent of poor Bahamian households are receiving social security benefits... ...an Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) report highlighting a dysfunctional welfare system that is failing to reach those most in need... and where the potential for fraud and abuse is rampant
By NEIL HARTNELL
Tribune Business Editor
LESS than 17 per cent of poor Bahamian households are receiving social security benefits, an Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) report highlighting a dysfunctional welfare system that is failing to reach those most in need, and where the potential for fraud and abuse is rampant.
The IDB report, which has been obtained by Tribune Business, also reveals that just 45 per cent of the Food Stamps issued by the Department of Social Services go to the poorest 20 per cent of Bahamian households, raising immediate questions of whether the system is being abused by wealthier persons and those with the right 'connections'.
Noting that there was no 'means testing' of applicants for social security benefit payments in the Bahamas, the IDB report said government officials found difficulty in accessing even the most basic information on welfare programmes, such as how may people were benefiting from them.
Evaluations of the Government's various social security initiatives, to determine whether they were functioning efficiently and reaching their targets, were described as "virtually non-existent".
The IDB report is part of an initiative to Strengthen Social Protection Programmes in the Bahamas, which is seeking to consolidate the various welfare benefits into a more streamlined package targeting the most vulnerable in Bahamian society.
It is also targeting waste, fraud and inefficiency in the system, in a bid to reduce the burden social security spending places on the Government's finances.
"The Bahamas has a range of non-contributory social protection programmes. However, there is considerable scope for consolidating, redesigning and strengthening programmes so that the safety net is better positioned to protect the poor and promote their human capital development," the IDB report said.
"The Ministry of Labour and Social Development implements over 10 cash-in-kind programmes, and households could potentially benefit from all of these."
These initiatives included the Food and Financial Assistance Programmes; the School Uniform and Footwear Programme; School Feeding Programme; Rent Programme; Water Programme; Electricity Programme; Disability Allowance; Emergency Assistance; Medical Care Assistance; and Residential and Non-residential Social Care Services.
Yet the IDB report warned: "Multiple small programmes are administratively burdensome, and increase possibilities for abuse. At the same time, gaps in coverage are present, with only 16.7 per cent of poor households in receipt of safety net benefits.
This suggests that the Bahamas' social security/welfare system is failing abysmally where it is most needed, in providing help to the poorest in society.
The IDB report said all the Government's benefits "rely on inefficient targeting mechanisms", with both those under the Ministry and the National Insurance Board (NIB) involving different applications and targeting procedures.
"Each programme has its own criteria for approval," the report added. "Applications for assistance to the Ministry of Labour and Social Development go through a labour intensive seven-step review process.
"Even with this multi-tiered approval process, only 45 per cent of Food Coupon benefits go to households in the poorest quintile, and this is despite the fact that the programme is ostensibly targeted to the indigent."
All of which suggests that the majority of Food Stamps, some 55 per cent, go to those who have no, or minimal need, for them - indicating the system is being abused.
"Information and monitoring systems are weak," the IDB report added. "Programme information is not fully computerised, and programme officials have difficulty accessing even basic programme information, such as how many programme beneficiaries there are, or beneficiaries' geographic and demographic composition.
"Programme evaluations are virtually non-existent. As a result, we do not know which programmes are achieving their objectives, and if they are efficient and cost-effective."
The IDB said the Government wanted to "improve the efficiency and effectiveness" of its social security spending. As a result, the project aimed "to help lessen, in the medium term, the fiscal burden of the welfare system by reducing leakages of transfers to non-eligible beneficiaries".
Administration was also targeted for improvement, and rationalising the Government's various benefit programmes "to avoid duplication, and restructuring to enhance efficiency and impact, is needed". Consolidation was a priority, along with expanding social security coverage "to a greater share of the poor".
"The consolidated programme should focus on protecting the most vulnerable and on promoting human capital development among children, including promoting healthy nutrition and keeping adolescents in school," the IDB report said.
Means testing, to ensure those actually needing social security support, are set to be introduced. The welfare programmes to be consolidated are the Food and Financial Assistance (rent, water and electricity) programmes; the School Uniform and Footwear programme; School Lunch programme; and Disability Allowance.
The IDB report acknowledged that the programme could be "politically sensitive" given the upcoming election, but the Government is moving to counter this by appointing a broad-based social protection reform working group.
January 06, 2012
tribune242
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Abuse, armed robbery, housebreaking, rape, assault, murder and attempted murder are rampant in The Bahamas... and speak to social breakdown... and in fact, constitute an on again off again war against the social and economic system
By Ian G. Strachan
Abuse, armed robbery, housebreaking, rape, assault, murder and attempted murder are rampant in The Bahamas, and speak to social breakdown, and in fact, constitute an on again off again war against the social and economic system. There are no shortcuts. I propose seven areas of focus in terms of improving the situation. I address the first three today.
Inequality and social justice
Poverty is the breeding ground of violence. Check the location of murders and the residence of murder accused and victims. Look at education and income levels. This recession, the lack of skills of the citizenry and their lack of hope, are breeding violent criminality – not in all poor people, but in enough poor people to terrorize a seven by 21 island. Baha Mar, in this respect, can’t be finished fast enough.
It does not help that our system of taxation burdens the poorest the most. It doesn’t help that crass materialism parades itself before the hungry, underprivileged, and marginalized each day, provoking them to question the order of things and take risks. There aren’t enough jobs, or there isn’t enough pay, to make the life of crime seem like a foolish option for many young men. The death of their brothers, cousins and friends in the streets doesn’t seem to matter either. And though we hunt down and lock up the drug dealer, we elect his lawyer to Parliament and make him a knight. What message does that send? It is cheaper to invest properly in a citizen’s education, health and socialization than it is to police, hospitalize, imprison, punish and rehabilitate that citizen.
Education
First, Bahamians no longer see the value of formal education. Most parents are unwilling or unable to make the sacrifices necessary to ensure that their children function as civil, thoughtful, analytical, creative adults. Seventy to 80 percent failure in math for instance, means 70-80 percent of students can’t reason well. That’s alarming.
I believe that too many Bahamians believe they don’t need to do well in school to make it. They are wrong. Many in our labor force have found out the hard way that when you are uneducated, you may find a job but you will rarely find a good paying one. Our expectations are far too great when compared to what most of us can earn. Add to this the fact that the work ethic of our high school graduates seems to deteriorate further with each passing year. Many men who entered the job market in the 60s and 70s with nothing but a junior or high school education knew a trade and worked hard. Many are successful businessmen today, walking in step with peers of their generation who got college degrees. The gap doesn’t seem so wide for them; however, the achievement gap that now exists between school leavers and college grads is big.
Second, the entrance requirements for the teaching profession must be raised and the salaries and benefits must be raised at the same time. Educational administrators (principals as well as ministry technocrats) must be held accountable for failure and rewarded for success. How can a system produce such levels of failure and fire so few of the people paid to fail? We want criminal justice, but what about educational justice? Make examples of those at the top before you squeeze those at the bottom.
The goal of our schools should be to produce responsible, civil, analytical, creative, trainable citizens. Such people will almost always believe they have options that go beyond violence and criminality. Most high school leavers in this country aren’t “criminals”, but they are citizens who, in a myriad of ways, can make life choices that contribute to the culture of disorder, incivility, destructive individualism, blind consumerism, civic impotence, foreign dependence, political ignorance, mediocrity, low productivity, prostitution, predation and poverty.
Third, our schools aren’t producing citizens who understand each man, woman and child’s responsibility to and dependence on “the other”. A key plank in the proper education/socialization of our citizens could be a national service curriculum and program. This should target all students. We want at-risk youth to have wholesome experiences and nurturing adult guidance that builds skills, builds community and builds esteem, but we also want to foster a sense of social responsibility and duty to the community and to nation-building in the well-to-do young Bahamian. Environmental stewardship, social outreach, agriculture, fishing, infrastructural maintenance, military and public service and so much more can be incorporated into such a program.
Fourth, college attendance is a serious problem. Our goal as a country should be to ensure that one in three Bahamians attains higher education. Currently it is closer to one in 10. This affects human potential, the social fabric, and our overall economic horizons. They will be able to approach life’s challenges with greater resilience and creativity. In a recent study by College of The Bahamas (COB) faculty, who surveyed a pool of over 300 prison inmates, it was discovered that 90 percent of those inmates had no tertiary education and over 50 percent of them had dropped out of school. College education is not the panacea for all that ails us but it is a crucial tool in the effort to build a more prosperous, versatile and peaceful society.
Parenting
The way that parenting impacts our nation is powerful and dynamic. Having an economically depressed, frustrated, neglectful and possibly violent person for a parent is tragic, but doesn’t show up on our crime radar, and that is a large part of why this very potent area is hard to properly address. The state, by and large, cannot police parenting. However, this does not mean that the state cannot and should not try to heavily influence parents and provide greater social and economic support for families. Funding may not be as great as we would wish, but how we distribute the funds we do have can always be evaluated and reevaluated based on clearly set objectives. What are our objectives? I have read many manifestos and still can’t point you to where our nation’s objectives are when it comes to family and parenting. Well, here are the five objectives that have guided France’s family policy over the last several decades:
Solidarity – to compensate families for the economic costs of child rearing;
Pronatalism – to encourage a higher birth rate;
Social justice – to redistribute income to low-income families with children;
To protect the well-being of children; and
In more recent years, to protect parental choice among family types regardless of whether parents choose to work outside the home or to remain at home to rear children.
All of these, save perhaps number two, should interest us greatly. The size of the population and the budget of a nation certainly allow a nation like France to have far more programs and initiatives; however, what money is needed to have a clearly-stated objective? And once we are clear on what we want to accomplish, then we can allocate whatever funding we have appropriately. There is a clear connection between parenting, violence and criminality. COB researchers found that 18 percent of the inmates who were high school dropouts, dropped out to help their families. Thirty-one percent indicated that they had been abused, 47 percent of them by their parents. Forty-nine percent witnessed violence (abuse) in their homes, 66 percent of that violence was physical, not including sexual abuse which was another five percent. The initial exposure to violence as a way of life and as a problem solving technique is most often in the home, the least regulated place in society.
So how do we get past the barriers and reach parents where they are? When a child is born, who is assigned to the mothers, particularly the 623 teen mothers we had last year, to help them with their most important social responsibility: parenting? Are teen mothers, unemployed mothers and mothers living in poor, high crime neighborhoods automatically assigned a case worker and nurse to monitor them for at least one year? If not, why not? How can our laws enable women to stay at home longer after giving birth instead of being forced to return to work, sometimes as quickly as six weeks later due to economic pressure? What are we doing to encourage young fathers to be more involved, positively, in their children’s lives? How closely do we regulate child care for babies and toddlers? Why is there such a wide range of standards for paid child care in this age group? Infant and toddler care should not be better in East Bay than it is on Balfour Avenue. This age group is far too vulnerable to be subject to inferior care because their parent(s) are low income generating. Regulating the business of child care, and income won’t be a barrier to good care.
Another point of concern is when we sign heads of agreements with major investors, if we have no family objectives before us then we end up agreeing to things that potentially hurt families. We allow multimillion dollar investors to ignore basic day care for workers so that the option is unavailable for young children to be close to their working mothers. I especially would like to see this happen in the hotel sector where shifts are spread across 24 hours. In fact, perhaps we need laws or industrial agreements that protect single mothers of infants/toddlers from overnight shifts and Sunday work.
Next we conclude this series with a look at community development, creating a climate of discipline and order in our society, and our notions of criminal justice.
Nov 07, 2011
Gangster’s Paradise Part 4Gangster’s Paradise Part 2