Abstract

This article intends to analyze Universal Child Allowance (UCA)—a large-scale conditional cash transfer (CCT) program in Argentina—from a human rights and constitutional perspective. Conditions required in the UCA system—which covers informal and unemployed workers—are compared to those established in family allowances, the contributory program created for registered workers. These differences in treatment are analyzed in connection with the right to equal treatment, taking into account applicable legal materials, including caselaw and theoretical contributions. After describing CCT programs in general and the specific features of UCA, and outlining Argentina’s constitutional and human rights framework, the article describes the specific conditions—maximum income, nationality, maximum number of covered children—applied only to informal and unregistered workers included in the UCA program. Compared to family allowances beneficiaries, workers under UCA have a much lower maximum wage limit to be eligible, and their children must fulfill nationality or legal residence requirements not applicable under the family allowances system. UCA covers only up to five children per family, while family allowances are paid to every child in formal workers’ families, with no restrictions. The article concludes that these planned differences in treatment are not admissible under Argentina’s human rights obligations and constitutional setting. The article also advocates a human rights-based design for social policies, in order to ensure consistency with Argentina’s Constitution and international obligations.

Highlights

  • I take a human rights prospective to analyze the design of the Universal Child Allowance, a large-scale noncontributory conditional cash transfers program in Argentina

  • Statistical studies on Latin American countries that implement Conditional Cash Transfers (CCT) programs show that poverty levels in those countries would have been 13% higher had the programs not been put in place (Stampini & Tornarolli, 2012, p. 11)

  • Universal Child Allowance (UCA) amount is equal to the highest family allowances value

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

I take a human rights prospective to analyze the design of the Universal Child Allowance (hereinafter “UCA”; Asignación Universal por Hijo, in Spanish), a large-scale noncontributory conditional cash transfers program in Argentina. I describe Conditional Cash Transfers (CCT) as an increasingly embraced policy option in Latin America. I characterize UCA and its differences with the corresponding contributory program, family allowances (Asignaciones Familiares, in Spanish). I analyze UCA design from a human rights and constitutional perspective to argue unjustified differences between children contradict the right to equal treatment and other relevant rights. I suggest human and constitutional rights should have a decisive role in Argentina’s policy design process in order to avoid these unacceptable planned differences

CCT PROGRAMS IN LATIN AMERICA
UCA: A CCT PROGRAM IN ARGENTINA
ASSESING UCA FROM A NEW PERSPECTIVE
CONDITIONED RIGHTS
A QUESTION OF EQUALITY
VII.1. Maximum income
VII.2. Nationality
VII.3. Required documents
VII.4. Number of included children
Findings
VIII. CONCLUSIONS
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