Latin America and the Caribbean

Mexico

SDG Finance - Enabling Environment

Improving the allocation of risks and resources in Mexico for sustainable development

Total funding allocated
SDG Finance - Enabling Environment
US $ 999998
Co-funding by UN agencies
SDG Finance - Enabling Environment
US $ 588416
#IntegratedFinancing
#Resilience
#Climate

Brief Description

The Joint Programme will contribute to leverage the amount of public and private resources allocated for sustainable development, focusing on increasing the financial system’s resilience to the most pressing social and environmental risks; by the identification of the financial gaps; the formulation of strategies and tools to integrate emerging risk categories into macro and micro prudential risk assessments and into the governance of the central bank and financial regulators; and by consolidating institutional capacities for asset recovery and reintegration.

Approach

The programme will strengthen the governance of the Mexican financial system for sustainable development, through a three-pronged strategy. The first stage will be to identify resource gaps by mapping the financial and non-financial resources to implement the SDGs at the national level, develop policies, regulations and tools to strengthen the financial system resilience to environmental and climate risks, support the relevant national authorities in reinforcing the legal and institutional framework and capacities to identify, recover and integrate assets resulting from corruption and crimes that derive or link from it, in the country’s sustainable development priorities.

Quick facts

Total budget:
US $ 1,588,414

UN Agencies:

UNODC, UNDP, UNEP


National Partners:

Ministry of Finance and Public Credit


Duration:
Jan 2021 - Dec 2022

Financial Information
Integrated Policy

Closing Gaps: Making Social Protection Work for Women in Mexico


The programme brief description

The programme recognizes that Mexican women face huge barriers to access social protection, especially those groups of women that still are not legally included in fully-fledged social protection such as domestic and women temporary agricultural workers, thus exacerbating their vulnerability. If the existent policies and legislation are strengthened in order to protect women, especially those in more vulnerable situations; if more key stakeholders gain the necessary knowledge and skills about social protection relevance and programme management; and if incentives are set to promote workers’ affiliation to social protection; then access to adequate social protection and care services for women in Mexico will substantially increase, closing the gaps that currently exist for their full incorporation to the formal economy and fulfillment of their rights.

Approach:

Differently from conventional approaches, the programme will have strong local elements, working in parallel at national level, in five states (Mexico City, State of Mexico, Oaxaca, Jalisco and Chiapas) and in at least one municipality in the country (Iztapalapa, Mexico City). This approach will support the policy proposals and effective implementation at local level, offering the opportunity to replicate them in other states following the evaluation of the results collected.

Target groups

The target groups are particularly women in situations of exclusion, including domestic workers and women temporary agricultural workers at national level.

 

Quick facts

Total budget:
US $ 2,400,408

UN Agencies:

ILO, UN Women, FAO


National Partners:

Presidency Office, through the National Council for the implementation of the 2030 Agenda; INMUJERES (National Institute for Women); IMSS (Mexican Institute for Social Security); INPI (National Institute for Indigenous Population); STPS (Ministry of Labour and Social Protection); BIENESTAR (Ministry of Welfare); CONAPRED (National Council for the Prevention of Discrimination); Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development; ICAT (Workers' Training Institute), Mexico City; Ministry of Women ́s Affairs (Mexico City); STYFE (Secretary of Labour and Employment Promotion, Mexico City); STPS (Secretary of Labour and Social Protection, Jalisco State); Secretariat of Substantive Equality between Women and Men, State of Jalisco; SEDECO (Secretary of Economic Development, Mexico, City); Secretary of Economy (State of Oaxaca); Secretary of Economy and Labour (State of Chiapas); Secretary of Women's Affairs (State of Oaxaca); Secretary of Social Development (State of Oaxaca); Secretary of Women’s Affairs (State of Chiapas)


Duration:
February 1, 2020 to May 31, 2022 (28 months)

Financial Information