World Social Protection Report 2024-26: Universal social protection for climate action and a just transition
This ILO flagship report provides a global overview of progress made around the world since 2015 in extending social protection, with a sharp focus on the climate crisis and the need for climate action to transition to a more sustainable world.
The World Social Protection Report 2024-26 focuses on the climate crisis and the need to transition to a more sustainable world, and provides a global overview of progress made around the world since 2015 in extending social protection. The report identifies protection gaps and sets out key policy recommendations, including those for achieving the targets of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
For the first time, new trend data indicates that more than half of the world’s population are covered by social protection. But this welcome progress is dampened by the fact that 3.8 billion people are still entirely unprotected from life’s challenges and the impacts of climate change. Universal social protection systems have an important role to play in responding to the climate crisis and can help realise climate ambitions while facilitating a just transition to more sustainable societies. Greater investment in and expansion of social protection systems would support general climate mitigation and adaptation efforts and garner public support for climate policies. The report calls on policymakers, social partners and other stakeholders to accelerate their efforts to simultaneously close protection gaps and realize climate ambitions.
Key messages
Key charts and data
Who is covered by social protection?
How much is spent on social protection?
See also
Topic portal
Social protection
Social protection plays a key role in countering climate change impact but countries most impacted by the climate crisis are the least...
ILO Live
Global launch of the World Social Protection Report 2024-26: Universal Social Protection for Climate Action and a Just Transition
Social protection
Asia-Pacific achieves social protection milestone, yet challenges remain and new ones emerge with climate change