Slow progress toward meeting needs
Pedro A. Adams
The author is a consultant with the Asamblea de la Sociedad Civil (non-governmental organisation in which various NGOs participate) on the ‘Proyecto Gobiernómetro’, the instrument used to monitor the government’s Social Agenda.
Nineteen ninety-nine witnessed the consolidation of democracy, the achievement of sovereignty over the whole of national territory and the emerging availability of new assets (the Panama Canal and surrounding areas) among public resources to be invested in national development. The country’s struggle to achieve complete sovereignty had been a constant aspiration uniting all Panamanians over the generations. The obtainment of full sovereignty signals an opportune moment to concentrate on another task: the battle against poverty.
The
enclave development of the Panamanian economy has not allowed the
majority of people to enjoy the fruits of economic growth, despite
increased social spending by government. Macroeconomic indicators relating to employment and growth in
gross domestic product (GDP) show an improvement in poverty levels in
Panamanian society. Nonetheless,
the income gap has grown, exacerbating social inequality. The expected
3.3% growth in GDP for 1999 does not apply to all sectors of the
population. The structural reforms initiated at the beginning of the
1990s have not resolved the serious problems of infant malnutrition,
extreme poverty and lack of access to health and education services.
The
outgoing government increased social expenditure, both as share of
total public spending and as a proportion of GDP. A sectoral analysis
of spending shows that the largest increase in social expenditure is
concentrated in education and social security, followed by the health
sector.
The
amount of public funds spent on social areas has grown at an average
annual rate of 5.78% in the last six years, while per capita
spending increased by 3.27% annually, according to non-official
sources.
The
new government signed two new loans with the Inter-American
Development Bank (IDB) for USD 65 million for the Poverty Relief
and Community-based Development programme and the National
Environmental Programme. This reflects a tendency to maintain and
increase social spending as far as possible.
But progress is not as great as had been hoped. Public funds
destined for social services are still managed inefficiently. The new
government faces the challenging task of maintaining and increasing
the level and efficiency of social spending if it wants to achieve
substantial improvements in the living standards of the poorest
sectors. Well-executed
programmes with clearly-defined objectives, goals, target populations,
evaluation systems, and participation by the population, would yield
better results. The new
governments duty to the million poor people in this country obliges
it to optimise the resources assigned to combating poverty. The
payment of foreign debt service remains a serious obstacle to
development. The renegotiation of the debt with international finance
institutions cannot, therefore, be delayed.
Slow
social development
Social
development in Panama is influenced by various factors linked to the
model of development implemented in the country. The incidence of
poverty and lack of social equity are alarming. The label poor
refers to the inability of large sectors of the population to satisfy
their basic needs because of their low levels of income. Criteria established to calculate the proportion of the
population living in poverty show
37.3% of the population living in poverty (those with a monthly
income of less than USD 75.42) and 18.8% living in absolute poverty
(with a monthly income of less than USD 43.25).
Children
and the indigenous population are most affected by poverty. Of
children under the age of five, 53% live in poverty, while for those
under fourteen, the percentage varies from 50% to 46%.
Of the indigenous population, 95.4%
live in alarmingly poverty-stricken conditions.
The
20% of the population with the highest income has consumption rates
that are 15 times greater than those of the poorest 20%. The income of
the richest 20% outstrips that of the poorest 20% by 41.5%, according
to sources at the National Studies Institute of the University of
Panama (IDEN).
The
lack of equity characterised by unequal distribution of wealth is the
result of a variety of factors, among them education levels.
In Panama, people with higher education receive an average
monthly income 8.8 times higher than that of people with no schooling
at all.
Proprietary
assets also affect the unequal distribution of income: 55.2% of rural
households do not own land for agricultural and/or livestock rearing
use and have only usufruct or holding rights.
In addition, 36.2% of households in the country do not have
title deeds and in rural areas many homes lack running water and
electricity. In demographic terms, in rural areas inequalities in
levels of consumption and the income gap are almost double those in
urban areas.
Employment
is another factor that influences the unequal distribution of income:
unemployment rates among the poor are double those for non-poor
sectors of the population. Unemployment levels in Panama have been
alarmingly high since 1983, when 10% of the economically active
population were unemployed. At
present, 11.6% of the EAP is unemployed (August 1999). According to a
household survey in August 1999, employment has increased in the
so-called informal sector, which includes 70% of workers who live in
conditions of poverty.
In
the metropolitan areathe provinces of Colón and Panama13.0% of
the EAP are unemployed. In the rest of the country, relatively fewer
people, 7.6% of the EAP, are unemployed. Overall, unemployment has
dropped, but much of the new employment generated is precarious, with
low or non-existent rates of unionisation and integration into the
social security system.
Indigenous
affairs will be dealt with by the recently created Council for
Indigenous Development, an institution attached to the Presidents
Office. This raises the
profile and status of the former Department of Indigenist Policy,
which was a section of the Government and Justice Ministry. The
proposal is to transform this Council into a Ministry of Indigenous
Affairs. While there are good initiatives for this sector of the
population, the land problem and non-ratification of ILO Convention
No. 169 distance government actions from the true aspirations of the
indigenous community.
Liberty
and citizen participation
Freedom
of expression improved with the abrogation toward the end of 1999 of
the so-called gagging laws, which regulated journalism
and gave the government powers of censorship.
The new President of the Republic, Mireya Moscoso, said that
the abrogation of the gagging laws is merely the first step
toward doing away with all remaining vestiges of norms that are
prejudicial to the freedom of the press and the right to information
and that violate Principle 4 of the Chapultepec Declaration.
The
new governments legitimisation of the Civil Society Assembly, as
external auditor of its Social Agenda, opens up space for
participation. This initial step represents a victory for organised
civil society, which is full of hope for the coming years.
In
1999, Law No. 4 was passed, instituting Equal Opportunities for Women.
This law aims to achieve real equality between men and women,
strengthen our nascent democracy and reach the levels of human
development that are required to face the challenges presented by the
new millennium. The law establishes the governments duty to
guarantee at least 30% female participation in posts as ministers,
vice-ministers, and directors of autonomous or semi-autonomous state
enterprises and other state institutions.
The
law originated in mobilisations by the womens movement over the
last few years. The movement put forth a particular vision of state
and society, it demanded womens rights and freedoms, and it
proposed public policy changes included in the Women and Development
Plan for Action. The law is an instrument to regulate and establish
the Panamanian states policy on women, based in essence on the
principles of non-discrimination
by sex, equality before the law, equity, protection of human rights,
equality of opportunities and treatment, and the condemnation of all
forms of violence.
While
this law and others manifest the fact that agreements between the
womens movement and the state are being legitimised in law,
effective implementation of the law is not guaranteed per se.
Even women with post-graduate degrees are paid about half of
what men receive, and female unemployment rates are double those for
men.
Perspectives
Combating
poverty will depend on good management by the new government, economic
and political stability, the issuing of title deeds to land,
modernisation and decentralisation of central administration, on-going
human resources training, universal access to health and education,
and the assimilation of technology transfer into the countrys
productive processes. The continued implementation of anti-poverty
programmes by successive governments and fulfilment of the government
agenda for good governance, together with the modernisation of the
education system, will allow the nation to move toward sustainable
development.
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