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This guest blog was written for the Hub on the occasion of International Day for Living Together in Peace (16 May)
Written by Chiara Genovese, Consortium Manager for CAMEALEON
Since October 2019, Lebanon has experienced one of the ten worst economic crises globally since 19th century, compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic and Beirut port explosion [1]. The Lebanese lira has lost over 98 per cent of its value since the start of the crisis and annual inflation reached 264 per cent in the year to March 2023[2]. In December 2022, 37 per cent of the population, including refugee and host communities, lived in acute food insecurity[3].
34 per cent of the Lebanese citizens, the ‘missing middle’, were completely excluded from the social protection system
In the face of the multi-pronged crisis, the systems used to deliver humanitarian assistance remained resilient and were able to scale up rapidly to meet the increasing needs of the refugee population[4]. In contrast, the national social protection systems for Lebanese have been slow to adapt to the rapidly changing environment. While international grants and loans aim to strengthen the social protection systems in Lebanon, before the crisis Lebanon spent 6 per cent of its GDP on social protection, excluding health and subsidies, which is below the middle-income countries’ average spending of 8 per cent[5]. The largest portion of this spending was allocated to social insurance for public-sector workers while 34 per cent of the Lebanese citizens, the ‘missing middle’, were completely excluded from the social protection system[6].
85 per cent of the population in Lebanon thought that vulnerable Lebanese had been neglected by the international aid/assistance programmes
Social relations between the refugee and host communities have dramatically deteriorated in recent months. In March 2023, nearly 85 per cent of the population in Lebanon thought that vulnerable Lebanese had been neglected by the international aid/assistance programmes and over 25 per cent of the population thought that aid distribution was unfair[7]. Rumours related to cash assistance are widespread and contribute to misinformation. Rumours such as “cash assistance is keeping Syrian refugees in Lebanon” and “Syrians travel to Lebanon to withdraw their assistance and spend it in Syria” are unsupported by evidence. While social protection systems have the potential to transform relationships in society by reducing structural inequalities, the following features of the social protection system in Lebanon place important barriers to the fulfillment of its social cohesion function.
First, the crisis has plunged over two thirds of the Lebanese population into poverty[8]. This is the first time that many Lebanese families experience poverty. Some of them may feel the stigma of being on the receiving-end of social transfers and be unwilling to disclose their assistance status. A similar dynamic was observed with Syrian refugees: “When we first arrived, we were too ashamed to register, you know? We thought our living all together was rather shameful. But we felt braver when we saw everyone else going. It’s just hard asking for help. You feel like a beggar. But once you receive assistance, it feels good”, said Yara, 35, a Syrian refugee living in Central Bekaa Valley[9].
Second, the lack of a national social registry means that it is difficult to record and report on the amount of social assistance that goes to the Lebanese population. In March 2023, the National Poverty Targeting Programme (NPTP), a national social safety net, and the Emergency Social Safety Net (ESSN), a temporary scale-up of NPTP, jointly reached nearly 150,000 Lebanese households[10]. However, they are implemented and reported under different response frameworks. While multiple calls have been made by local civil society organizations to establish a national social registry[11], the existing fragmented systems have important implications for transparency and accountability to affected population.
Third, targeting for humanitarian cash assistance and social assistance is predominantly based on proxy-means test (PMT), a statistical approach that uses socio-economic characteristics to estimate vulnerability and poverty levels. While PMT approaches support the rapid scale-up of social assistance at times of covariate shocks that affect large portions of the population, they are often perceived as a black box by affected populations. In 2018, the UN call center received over a million calls by Syrian refugees in Lebanon, of which 71 per cent related to targeting[12]. PMT approaches suffer from significant exclusion errors. An increasing body of evidence sheds light on the strategies that affected populations use to cope with exclusion errors from targeted assistance, such as sending children to live with beneficiary families[13]. While policy-makers continue to invest resources in calibrating the statistical formula to identify those who are eligible for assistance, affected population effectively enact a progressive redistribution of resources. As Meg Sattler, Director at Ground Truth Solutions, wrote: “Principles and standards are critically important, but we might need more rigorous reflection on what is protection and what is paternalism”[14].
Rights, as opposed to handouts, provide an equitable foundation of social assistance and prevent feelings of stigma
Social cohesion between refugee and host communities is deteriorating at a rapid pace in Lebanon. Since April 2023, discriminatory raids have resulted in the deportation of hundreds of Syrian refugees to Syria[15]. A rights-based social protection system contributes to strengthening the social contract between the state and its citizens. Rights, as opposed to handouts, provide an equitable foundation of social assistance and prevent feelings of stigma. A national social registry offers a transparent source of information and a tangible measure of how resources generated through taxation are being spent. Clear and easy-to-understand targeting criteria contribute to a perception of fairness. The experience in Lebanon demonstrates the importance of a rights-based, transparent, and accountable social protection system for refugee and host communities to live together in peace.
[1] World Bank, “Lebanon Sinking into One of the Most Severe Global Crises Episodes, amidst Deliberate Inaction”, June 2021
[2] Central Administration of Statistics
[3] WFP, “Integrated Food Security Phase Classification”, December 2022
[4] CAMEALEON and Durable Solutions Platform, “Pinning down moving targets”, December 2020
[5] UNICEF and ILO, Towards a social protection floor for Lebanon: Policy options and costs for core life-cycle social grants, March 2021.
[6] ILO, “Vulnerability and Social Protection Gaps Assessment – Lebanon”, September 2021
[7] UNDP, “Overview of Communal Relations in Lebanon”, May 2023
[8] ILO, “Vulnerability and Social Protection Gaps Assessment – Lebanon”, September 2021
[9] Ground Truth Solutions, “User journeys of Syrian refugees receiving multi-purpose cash assistance from WFP in Lebanon”, April 2021
[10] Basic Assistance Working Group meeting in May 2023 and IMPACT
[11] Wassim Maktabi, Sami Zoughaib, Sami Atallah, “Near Miss: Lebanon’s ESSN evades elite capture”, November 2022
[12] CAMEALEON, “Cash assistance in Lebanon: accountability to affected populations”, September 2019
[13] Berk Özler, Çiğdem Çelik, Scott Cunningham, P. Facundo Cuevas, Luca Parisotto, “Children on the move: Progressive redistribution of humanitarian cash transfers among refugees”, November 2021
[14] Meg Sattler, “Five ways the aid system can improve its accountability to affected people”, April 2023
[15] Amnesty International, “Lebanon: Halt summary deportations of Syrian refugees”, May 2023
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