Climate resilience through social protection: the economic case for early action

Issue paper
, pages
PDF (1.78 MB)
Preview of 22668iied
Language:
English
Published: October 2025
Publisher(s):
ISBN: 9781837591671
Product code:22668IIED

Climate change is no longer a distant risk but a systemic development crisis. The impacts are particularly devastating for the least developed countries and Small Island Developing States, where repeated shocks are eroding hard-won development gains and driving households deeper into poverty.

This paper demonstrates how taking early action through social protection programmes is more cost-effective than reactive, post-disaster responses and can be socially transformative.

It highlights two complementary pathways for building resilience: anticipatory direct benefit transfers and longer-term resilience-building investments, and presents the business case for these approaches — including benefit–cost ratios and return on investment — compared with existing social protection and humanitarian responses.

The findings are based on analysis from eight countries: Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Malawi, Pakistan, Senegal and Uganda.

Cite this publication

Bharadwaj, R., Karthikeyan, N. and Chaliha , S. (2025). Climate resilience through social protection: the economic case for early action. IIED, London.
Available at https://www.iied.org/22668iied