


Luri Jones
Social protection systems are designed to sustain income security and prevent poverty, and in most countries redistribute funds which are a significant portion of the national GDP. Efficient governance supported by sound quantitative studies can make a lasting difference to the long-term sustainability of these systems. Given the uncertainty of future events and the complex interrelated nature of pension systems, projection methods and models are crucial for empowering policy-makers in design and monitoring. The aim of this course was to enhance the capacity of participants to use projection methods, develop actuarial models and build their own country-specific model based on the generic model of the ILO.
OBJECTIVES
Through this training, participants should have acquired the knowledge to:
Increase your technical knowledge and expertise on social protection financing methods and actuarial modelling needed for the effective design, management and monitoring of social protection system;
Learn how modelling can be used to project future social protection expenditure and revenues;
Utilize knowledge on actuarial methodologies and models;
Understand better and participate more actively in the actuarial and financial planning of social protection systems.
CONTENT
Identifying theories of change and impact pathways of social protection systems
National projection: Demographic projection, labour force and employment projection and economic projection,
Scheme-specific projection: Social security data analysis, scheme-specific past experience review and assumptions, and modeling scheme-specific projections,
Validating and interpreting projection: Projection consistency and validation, interpretation of scheme-specific results and long-term sustainability and financing strategies.
ACHIEVEMENT
The course consisted of a number of online modules offered through the eCampus over a period of seven weeks for an estimated total of 100 learning hours.
The assessment structure included the following elements:
Technical Forum (20%)
Assignments (30%)
Collaborative activities (10%)
Final presentation (20%)
Technical memo (20%)
NUMBER OF HOURS: 100
Skills / Knowledge
- Actuarial Modeling
- Quantitative skills
- Financial mathematics
- Systems thinking
- Evidence-based assessment
- Critical appraisal
- Policy analysis
- Problem-solving
- Research
- Social protection governance