Resilient Institutions for a Transformative Post-pandemic Recovery in Latin America and the Caribbean


Book Description

The emergency generated by the COVID-19 pandemic has turned a spotlight on the key role of the State in providing public goods and services, while the public sector has returned to the fore as the locus for emergency response and for driving the recovery. However, the State and the public sector have been rendered less effective by the weakening of public leadership and of its capacity to generate confidence in the work of State institutions. This document argues that stronger State institutions are needed to address the structural problems of the current development pattern and tackle the new challenges posed by the current crisis and others the future may bring. Institutions need renewed capacities and leadership to design and implement policies and programmes capable of meeting present needs with a future vision, in a way that is participatory, collaborative and inclusive. It is a matter of urgency to build resilient public institutions that can cope with present crises and prepare for future ones, because the policy and investment decisions made today will condition our tomorrow.




Reducing Emissions from the Energy Sector for a More Resilient and Low-carbon Post-pandemic Recovery in Latin America and the Caribbean


Book Description

Introduction .-- I. Overview of energy systems in Latin America and the Caribbean .-- II. Contrasting current policies scenarios with NDC-compliance scenarios in Latin American and Caribbean countries with a focus on energy .-- III. The social and economic impacts of major renewable energy deployment: multiple opportunities in LAC .-- IV. Improving the regulatory environment and public policy framework to foster non-conventional renewable energy in Latin America and the Caribbean .-- V. Harnessing the economic recovery while accelerating the energy transition in Latin America and the Caribbean .-- VI. Concluding remarks.




Land governance in Latin America and the Caribbean


Book Description

The effects of the crisis generated by the coronavirus pandemic continue to evolve and hit our societies hard. In the case of LAC, land tenure is at the heart of its development; this issue like no other has caused wars, displacement, social conflicts, corruption, hunger and poverty. In particular, extreme inequality in access to and control of land is one of the great unsolved problems in LAC; it is at the same time the cause and consequence of highly polarized social structures that have fed and continue to feed the political crises that are currently suffering greatly in their countries. With public policies that continue to ignore this structural challenge, it will not be possible to reduce the economic and social inequality that the pandemic has only come to reveal and exacerbate with greater brutality, and neither will it be possible to achieve the recovery with transformation echoed by speeches today from various sectors.




A Mandate to Grow


Book Description

The 2018 Macroeconomic Report, A Mandate to Grow, revisits the growth debate that has been raging in the region for the past half century. Viewing the debate from this long-term perspective allows for a focus on the structural factors that have prevented Latin America and the Caribbean from reaching the growth potential required to keep pace with faster growing regions and to fulfill the aspirations of its population.







How to Finance Sustainable Development: Recovery from the Effects of COVID-19 in Latin America and the Caribbean


Book Description

I. Stylized facts of two processes that are difficult to reverse: a worsening environmental situation and setbacks with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. -- II. By targeting recovery spending, the opportunity to boost transformative sectors has been lost and this, coupled with the uncritical demand in recovery, underlines the unsustainable nature of thepre-pandemic development pattern .-- III. Aligning policies for the big push forsustainability, as a pillar of the recovery.







Care in Latin America and the Caribbean During the COVID-19: Towards Comprehensive Systems to Strengthen Response and Recovery


Book Description

Introduction .-- The importance of care for sustainable development and welfare in Latin America and the Caribbean .-- Care policies in Latin America and the Caribbean: inspiring practices .-- The COVID-19 crisis and the pre-existing care crisis .-- Measures to address the impacts of COVID-19 on the care sector. Progress in the region .-- From crisis to opportunity: recommendations for the promotion of care policies in Latin America and the Caribbean.




Resilient and Affordable Housing in the Caribbean: Policy Recommendations Towards a Transformative, Green and Inclusive Recovery Strategy. Policy Brief


Book Description

The Caribbean faces multidimensional vulnerabilities driven by climate change and aggravated by Small Island Developing States' natural and economic characteristics (SIDS). A critical natural feature of SIDS is the extreme vulnerability to climate-change-induced events. Economically, the Caribbean has followed the global trend of seeing its urban areas swell during the last decades. Moreover, the region's coastal areas expose human settlements, infrastructure, and businesses to external shocks, such as climate change-induced extreme weather events. In addition, the 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) introduced a new dimension to these vulnerabilities, widening inequalities and demanding new and more localized approaches to how Caribbean countries respond to the pandemic's economic and social fallouts.




2025 Post-Covid Scenarios


Book Description