Program Objectives

Main Objectives
Wage employment
Food security
Financial Inclusion
Self-employment
Market access
Social services
Diversification
Women's Empowerment
Environmental Management
Productivity
Social Inclusion
Resilience
Program Development Objective(description)

The Productive Social Action Program (PASP) is one of the basic social security programs of the Government of Mozambique and has two components, namely "Public Works" and "Support for the Development of Income Generation Initiatives (ADIGR)".

ADIGR aims at preparing beneficiaries of PASP for graduation and facilitating access to income generation opportunities that will accelerate their process o

Program Components

TRANSFERS
COACHING
BUSINESS CAPITAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES FACILITATION
WAGE EMPLOYMENT FACILITATION
MARKET LINKS
SKILLS TRAINING
NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND CLIMATE CHANGE
Average Program Duration for Program Beneficiaries
Under one year
Between one and three years
More than three years
Do Participants Access Components in a Specific Sequence?

Digitization

COMPONENTS DELIVERED DIGITALLY
TRANSFERS
COACHING
BUSINESS CAPITAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES FACILITATION
MARKET LINKS
SKILLS TRAINING

PARTICIPANT PROFILE

TARGETED POVERTY GROUPS

Poor

PRIORITY VULNERABLE GROUPS

Women

Youth

ELIGIBILITYCRITERIA

Poverty status

PARTICIPANT IDENTIFICATION METHODS

Geographic targeting

Proxy Means Test

Government social registry

Basic Program Information

COUNTRY
Mozambique
REGION
Sub-Saharan Africa
LEAD IMPLEMENTING AGENCY
Instituto Nacional de Acção Social (INAS)
TYPE LEAD
IMPLEMENTING AGENCY
National/central government
START DATE
END DATE
PRIMARY ENTRY POINT
Social Safety Nets
P-CODE (WB PROGRAMS)
P129524
GLOBAL PRACTICE (WB PROGRAMS)
Social Protection & Jobs

Country Information

Lending Category (WB Only)
IDA
FCV Country (WB FY20 List)
No
TOTAL POPULATION (Million)

27.21

POVERTY HEADCOUNT (NPL)

46.10%

POVERTY HEADCOUNT ($1.90/DAYPPP2011)

62.48%

POVERTY HEADCOUNT (MPI)

66.41%

NO. ECONOMIC INCLUSION PROGRAMS IN THE COUNTRY

4

NO. BENEFICIARIES (DIRECT & INDIRECT) OF ECONOMIC INCLUSION PROGRAMS IN THE COUNTRY

136,877

PLANNED RESEARCH AND EVALUATION

EVALUATION/RESEARCH TYPES
IMPACT EVALUATION TOPICS
NAME RESEARCH PARTNERS
N/A
DATE WHEN RESULTS AVAILABLE
-
LINK TO PUBLISHED WORK

Program Coverage

DIRECT BENEFICIARIES

1,000

DIRECT & INDIRE CT BEN EFICIARIES

4,370

PERCENTAGE FEMALE BENEFICIARIES

51-75%

Percentage of country population
0.02%
Percentage of country population under the poverty line
0.03%
Area/s
Rural Urban
Geographic coverage
Several states/regions

Institutional Arrangements

Organizations Involved In Implementation Providing Financing
National/central government
Regional/district government
Local/municipal government
Nongovernmental organization
Community
Financial Service Provider
World Bank
Multilateral organization (not WB)
Bilateral organization
Private sector organization

Community Engagement

Components Delivered Through Community
  • Business capital
  • Skills Training
  • Coaching
  • Financial services facilitation
  • Market Links
Community Structures Leveraged for Program delivery
  • Informal community groups
  • Formal community groups
  • Formalized producer organizations
  • Local governance group
Does the program create/strengthen community structures/groups?

Contact Us

Colin Andrews, Program Manager
peidp@worldbank.org

DNA: Does Not Apply; FY: Fiscal Year; FCV: Fragility, Conflict, and Violence; MPI: Multidimensional Poverty Index; NPL: National Poverty Line; N/A: Not available; WB: World Bank