Mozambique

 

The Social Protection system in Mozambique has been organized in three levels: non-contributory basic, compulsory, and complementary social security (Law 4, 2007). Basic Social Protection, in essence, involves non-contributory transfers and other welfare services for the poorest households, elderly, disabled, those who are chronically ill, and households with orphans and vulnerable children. The compulsory or contributory social security consists in social insurance for formal workers and public servants, including old-age pensions, cash sickness and maternity benefits, hospitalization, cash death grants and allowances for burial expenses. The complementary social security adds to the benefits at the compulsory level.

In May 2008, the Mozambican Minister of Social Affairs addressed a request to the ILO for assistance in designing a Social Protection Floor. ILO responded through the STEP Portugal project, a technical cooperation project that works to improve public policies and strengthen institutional capacity for the extension of social protection in Portuguese-speaking African countries. The project contributes to the implementation of the Social Protection Floor in Mozambique, mainly by strengthening the capacity of national public institutions responsible for elaborating and implementing social protection policies and for coordinating the assistance provided by international development partners in this field.

Significant institutional strides have recently been achieved in the area of extending basic social protection in Mozambique. The approval in 2010 of the Regulation for Basic Social Security and the National Strategy for Basic Social Security (ENSSB) paved the way for comprehensive and coordinated efforts to extend coverage and improve efficiency in delivery of social security benefits. Earlier in 2007, the Social Protection Law was the first step, establishing a mix of funding mechanisms and offering a set of potential benefits and programmes aligned with the Social Protection Floor definition. The Regulation was a step forward, protecting key rights, establishing universalization as a goal, but also noting that the extension of social protection will be gradual, in accordance with national capacity. This regulation defines four areas of intervention: direct social action (cash and in-kind transfers), health social action, productive social action and education social action. All this has led to an increased interest from national and international stakeholders translated for instance by a much higher profile of social protection in the new Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSP) (PARP 2011-2014).

As of 2011, Mozambique has limited statutory provision on 5 branches of security (sickness, maternity, old age, invalidity and survivor) covered by at least one programme.♦

Total population : 24.5 million
(UN Population Division | World Population Prospects, 2012)
GDP per capita (PPP US $) : 982
(World Bank | WDI, 2011)
GDP growth (in %) : 7.1
(World Bank | WDI, 2011)
Human Development Index (HDI) : 0.322 [Rank: 184]
(UNDP | Human Development Indicators, 2011)
Total expenditures on health as % of GDP : 5.2
(WHO | WHO Statistical System, 2010)
Public expenditure on health as % of GDP : 3.7
(WHO | WHO Statistical System, 2010)
Govt. expenditure on health as % of total govt. Expenditure : 12.2
(WHO | WHO Statistical System, 2010)
Health expenditure not financed out of pocket by private households (% total health expenditure) : 86.3
(WHO | WHO Statistical System, 2010)
Public social security expenditure (including health) as % of PIB : 4.62
(ILO Social security inquiry, 2006)
Share of population above the statutory retirement age benefiting from an old-age pension : 17.3
(ILO Social security inquiry, 2011)
Share of economically active population contributing to a pension scheme : 4.2
(ILO Social security inquiry, 2008)

Link to SSI: Statistics | Mozambique


Social security schemes and programs by branch

 


RESOURCES

Basic Social Security-Reaching the Most Vulnerable
Ministry of Women and Social Action (MMAS), 2011
The IMF and the Social Protection System in Mozambique
Lledó, V., 2011
Setting Up a Social Protection Floor - Mozambique
Mausse, M.; Cunha, N., 2011

NEWS & Calendar

Mozambique: ODI launches report on cash transfers
Building a social protection floor in Mozambique
CIPS News 09, April 2011

Links

CIPS Mozambique country page
Information Center on Social Protection (CIPS), 2009
Learning and Resources Centre on Social Inclusion (CIARIS)
ILO-STEP, 2008
Mozambique's country page on Wahenga
Regional Hunger and Vulnerability Programme (RHVP), 2010

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Page updated 2013-01-17

 
Nuno da Cunha
cunhan@ilo.org