Different pathways of social protection reforms: An analysis of long-term institutional change in Kenya
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
World Development
Abstract
The potential of social protection to contribute to inclusive growth has been increasingly recognized
throughout the last two decades. Social protection reforms involve comprehensive processes of
long-term institutional change. Dynamics differ not only across but also within countries across social
protection pillars reflecting multiple institutional trajectories and equilibria ranging from rapid and com prehensive shifts over processes of gradual change to situations of blocked reforms or reform reversals.
This paper seeks to understand why reforms aiming at extending social protection coverage to the poor
might differ across different pillars of social protection within the same country. Being embedded within
comparative institutional analysis the paper aims at providing a systematic framework for defining and
explaining variations in reform dynamics highlighting the role of uncertainty. The framework is applied
to the Kenyan case. The empirical methodology employs a process tracing approach including primary
and secondary data covering the time period between 2001 and 2017. The case of Kenya is one example
for multiple institutional trajectories within a country: Whereas cash transfer reforms follow a pattern of
cumulative incremental change, social health protection reforms reflect patterns of non-cumulative
change including blocked reforms and reform reversals. The results suggest that those differences are
partly explained by differences in preferences among agents or the institutional legacies within each
domain. In addition, behavioral responses to uncertainty matter: Stronger information asymmetries
within the cash transfer and fee waiver reform domains opened space for discretionary decision making. Interpretations of the concept of social protection and complexity of ’insurance’ facilitated pro cesses related to cash transfers whereas providing impediments to social health insurance. Lastly, the
international and socio-economic context provided focal points facilitating coordination on targeted or
vertical interventions such as cash transfers or fee waivers.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Social protection, Institutional change, Comparative institutional analysis, Africa