IESET.
Policies·mar_social_protection_generalisation_framework_2021

Morocco social-protection generalisation framework 2021

MAR·2021 present·Mohammed VI monarchy and Saadeddine Othmani governmentcandidate
movestransfer expansionspending levelrule of law

What the policy did

Morocco's framework law for generalising social protection set a staged plan to expand compulsory health insurance, family allowances, pension coverage, and unemployment-related protection to groups outside the previous formal contributory system. The programme moved social protection from narrower worker-linked schemes toward broader household coverage, with implementation tied to registries, financing reforms, and gradual rollout.

Policy-content fingerprint — what this policy moved, on which axes

Per invariant 3, reforms are scored by what they did on each channel-separated axis, not by the party that enacted them. This fingerprint is how the policy-match engine finds historical analogues.

intended
transfer expansion
fiscal.transfer_expansion
Size of cash and near-cash transfer programmes (unemployment benefits, means-tested assistance, universal child benefits). Architecturally distinct from forced-saving schemes — see condition welfare_architecture.
increased · strong
larger transfer footprint
Health coverage, family allowances, pensions, and unemployment protections were expanded toward broad population coverage.
spending level
fiscal.spending_level
General government spending as share of GDP, excluding transfers already captured under fiscal.transfer_expansion to avoid double-counting.
increased · moderate
higher spending share
Generalised coverage requires larger recurrent social spending and financing commitments.
rule of law
institutional.rule_of_law
Rule of law as institutional substrate — contract enforcement, judicial independence, equal treatment before the law. Upstream of most other axes.
increased · weak
stronger rule of law
Registry and eligibility rules formalise access to social benefits beyond ad hoc programmes.

Empirical evidence — linked hypotheses

Explicit links are curated by the author. Inferred links are hypotheses in the library that test the same axes this policy moved — the framework's answer to "what does the data say about a policy like this?".

Large welfare states sustain long-run real GDP per capita growth when paired with market flexibility (low product- and labour-market barriers), trade openness, and fiscal discipline (debt-to-GDP below 90%), but not when paired with rigid product and labour markets, in an OECD and rich- country panel 1980-2020.
welfare_state_market_flexibility_complementinferred
viafiscal.spending_levelfiscal.transfer_expansion
PARTIAL — coef=+3.308e-18, p=0.653; effect magnitude effectively zero
partial
Large-scale universal or near-universal transfer programmes produce a three-order causal chain.
universal_transfer_programmes_labour_force_participation_declineinferred
viafiscal.transfer_expansionfiscal.spending_level
partial — Prime-age LFP fell by ≥1.0pp in 2/5 cases (threshold for SUPPORTED: ≥3). First-order improved in 3/4 cases. Mixed: consistent with the spec's design-d…
partial
The v1 decomposition (three channels: WGI gov effectiveness, WGI rule of law, IMF debt/GDP) left 98% of the Nordic-vs-Southern-Europe log GDP/capita gap unexplained.
nordic_outcome_persistence_decomposition_v2inferred
viainstitutional.rule_of_lawfiscal.spending_level
PARTIAL — coef=-0.1578, p=0.211 (above α=0.1); direction inconclusive
partial
Across countries 1996-2023, higher WGI Rule of Law (RL) scores predict higher subsequent real per-capita GDP growth, conditional on standard controls (initial income, investment share, trade openness, demographic composition).
rule_of_law_institutional_growthinferred
viainstitutional.rule_of_lawfiscal.transfer_expansion
PARTIAL — coef=+5.028e-17, p=0.0526; effect magnitude effectively zero
partial
Countries in the top quartile of Heritage judicial effectiveness in 2024 have lower latest-available under-5 mortality than bottom-quartile countries, consistent with free-market country policy regimes outperforming less market-oriented regimes on this outcome.
heritage_judicial_effectiveness_under5_mortality_current_gapinferred
viainstitutional.rule_of_lawfiscal.transfer_expansion
SUPPORTED — top-vs-bottom gap has expected sign - and Welch p=4.272e-10
supported
Conditional on latest real GDP per capita and broad Heritage region, countries with higher Heritage judicial effectiveness in 2024 have lower latest-available under-5 mortality.
heritage_judicial_effectiveness_under5_mortality_income_region_robustnessinferred
viainstitutional.rule_of_lawfiscal.transfer_expansion
SUPPORTED — controlled market-score coefficient has expected sign - and p=0.0374
supported
El Salvador's FDI inflow, real-GDP growth, tourism arrivals, and business-formation rate accelerated under the Bukele era (2019-2024) relative to a Central American peer-country donor pool (Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Dominican Republic).
bukele_fdi_gdp_investment_climate_2019_2024inferred
viainstitutional.rule_of_law
PARTIAL — mean_gap=-0.697, |gap|/pre_sd=1.2, p_perm=1 (gap below 0.5×pre_sd or placebo p≥0.10)
partial
Japanese stagnation 1990-2020 (mean GDP growth under 1%) coincided with stable or improving wellbeing indicators (life expectancy, life satisfaction), refuting the claim that zero-growth necessarily degrades human outcomes.
japan_stagnation_wellbeing_outcomesinferred
viafiscal.transfer_expansioninstitutional.rule_of_lawfiscal.spending_level
supported_subset — stagnation confirmed (mean growth 0.96%); ≤1 of 4 canonical wellbeing indicators degraded. Cantril ladder NOT on disk; canonical basket cover…
supported

Similar historical policies

Ranked by axis-fingerprint overlap with this policy. Direction match bolded — those are the closest historical analogues. Shape of the match is what drives policy-outcome comparison, not the country or party label.

References

Notes

No current Morocco movement was added because this one policy alone does not justify a full new movement spec.