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12/19/2005
Shortly after the
Oct 8 earthquake that killed 73,000 people and left 3.3 million
homeless, mainly in Pakistan, the government in Islamabad made an
immediate and inspired decision to pay cash to earthquake
victims. The quick infusion of cash is enabling people to start
rebuilding their houses and their lives as soon as possible. “The
compensation is flowing like water,” Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz says.
Payments are being made for loss of shelter, death of a family member
and injury. Because the earthquake destroyed about 450,000
dwellings, shelter is the top priority.
The payments have strengthened the natural resiliency of the survivors,
who live a hard life at high altitudes in the steep, rugged area
damaged by the earthquake. Since many survivors are getting money
quickly, the payments give people a sense of independence. The money
has also cushioned the economy by giving victims money to spend, thus
encouraging the quick resumption of commerce in damaged areas.
When analysts draw lessons from Pakistan’s response to the earthquake,
the decision to make quick and generous compensation payments is likely
to stand out.
Shortly after the earthquake, Pakistan’s president, Pervez Musharraf,
decided to give every family that lost a house 25,000 rupees, or about
$440, so that people would have money to cover some of the costs
of displacement, as well as start work on rebuilding their
houses. Army teams traveled throughout the country, even climbing
into remote areas, to deliver checks for the first installment.
“We achieved our mission to protect our people with these small
payments,” a government official said.
The program has a few problems. First, people had to be in their
villages to get payment, meaning that those who had moved to camps
didn’t get paid. Since many vulnerable people, including widows
and orphans, have moved to camps, the neediest may not be getting
payment for shelter reconstruction, although they would get
compensation for deaths in the family or injury. Second, many
earthquake victims live in remote locations, far from banks where they
must cash the checks. While traveling with the UN to isolated locations
to deliver food and supplies, Refugees International encountered a man
who said he would have to walk five or six hours to the nearest bank in
Muzaffarabad and then stand in line for most of a day to cash his
check. Thus, getting his money would be a two day trip.
Worse, there have been reports that landlords are collecting a lot of
the money, rather than their tenant farmers who were displaced and must
rebuild their old homes or find new places to live. Still,
government and UN officials call the shelter payment program a
success.
A few days after the November 19 donors conference that generated U$6
billion in pledges for relief and reconstruction, President Musharraf
dramatically expanded the housing payments to a total of 175,000
rupees, or about $3,100, a large amount of money in a country where the
per capita gross domestic product is $2,200. The result is an “owner
driven” strategy for rebuilding houses. The payments come on top of
aggressive deliveries of food, blankets, tents and metal roofing sheets
to prepare people for winter.
The remaining payments will come in three installments as recipients
reach reconstruction bench marks. The money will be deposited
directly into banks, meaning that every recipient will have to open an
account. Pakistan is a notoriously corrupt country, but the
direct deposit of money into individual bank accounts is one way to
minimize the chances that the money will end up in the wrong
pockets. However, there are early reports of price gouging
by those selling construction materials; the government has vowed to
crack down hard on profiteering, although it’s unclear how effective
government price policing will be. The large amount of building
materials in relief packages provides downward pressure on prices.
Payments for death and injury have also started. Each family that
suffered a death of a next of kin is getting 100,000 rupees. Although
many families suffered multiple deaths, the maximum any family can get
is 100,000 rupees or about $1,760. Compensation for injuries
ranges from 15,000 to 50,000 rupees, with the top payments going to
amputees. RI met with a large group of injured people waiting to
be screened for payment in Muzaffarabad. One said the payments were
important because injuries had reduced his ability to work.
The payments have had an obvious impact on the economy. In
Muzaffarabad, formerly a city of 450,000 where 80% of the buildings
were destroyed, markets have risen from the rubble. They are
filled with corrugated steel sheets for roofing and other building
materials, along with clothing and other supplies.
Pakistan’s hope is to have many homes rebuilt quickly and to have all
homes rebuilt within two years. If this happens, the pace of
reconstruction will be much faster than in many areas hit by the
tsunami last Dec. 26. Oxfam, the relief and reconstruction
charity, just issued a report on the pace of housing reconstruction in
Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand and India. According to the
report, “By 26 December 2005, Oxfam estimates that around 20% of the
people made homeless a year earlier will be in satisfactory permanent
accommodations.”
There are many reasons for the relatively slow rebuilding after the
tsunami, including government decisions to require new dwellings to be
set back from the sea and the loss of documentation confirming land
ownership. But a lack of immediate and generous aid is one factor that
has slowed reconstruction. In Indonesia just two weeks after the
tsunami, survivors were already expressing to RI their desire for
immediate cash grants to rebuild their homes, but the Indonesian
government has chosen an approach to community reconstruction that is
centrally planned and controlled. A draft report for the Asian
Development Bank on Sri Lanka’s response to the tsunami criticizes the
government there for its parsimonious cash grants to maintain
livelihoods and rebuild housing. One of the fundamental lessons
of the tsunami response is the need to “provide immediate cash payments
to victims,” the Asian Development Bank says.
This the path Pakistan is taking. The strategy is right, but the
key to its success will be the speed and fairness of its
implementation.
Refugees International recommends that:
The government of Pakistan
Consider the establishment of mobile banks or other changes that will make it easier for people to cash their compensation checks or draw down their compensation accounts.
Work with local governments to make sure that landlords use their compensation to rebuild housing or pass the money on to tenants so they can rebuild.
Work with local governments to get shelter payments to widows, orphans and other vulnerable people who moved from villages to camps.
Rely on market mechanisms, such as incentives to provide adequate construction supplies, to hold down prices.
Other countries and the international community
Carefully study the response to Pakistan’s use of rapid and generous cash advances, which offer great promise in jump-starting reconstruction and economic activity following a natural disaster.
Pakistan: Shelter for earthquake survivors involves more than tents
Pakistan: Resources Inadequate to Meet Emergency Needs of Earthquake Victims
Refugee Voices: Rebuilding Schools, Rebuilding Lives in Pakistan
Pakistan Press: Earthquake Challenge has Galvanized the Nation
Pakistan: December Assessment of Next Steps in Earthquake Response
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