Portugal is reinforcing efforts to combat child poverty and social exclusion through implementing the European Child Guarantee (ECG). The country has developed a comprehensive national action plan to address the root causes of child poverty and social exclusion, and to guarantee access to key public services, while also responding to the specific needs of vulnerable groups of children. This cross-sectoral action plan is designed to enhance coordination across various policy initiatives and programmes that correspond with the objectives of the ECG. It also seeks to engage Local Child Guarantee Units, which are responsible for implementing measures on the ground and ensuring that support is tailored to the diverse needs of populations across the regions. To translate its efforts into success, Portugal should focus on:
Reinforcing governance of child and youth policy at the national level by establishing an interministerial coordination body at the highest level with a clear mandate to ensure a shared understanding of key issues, drive high-level commitment and ensure coherent monitoring and policy alignment across the various child-related frameworks under the new Single Strategy for the Rights of Children and Young People. Streamlining child-related frameworks will be key to achieving an integrated and child-centred governance framework.
Strengthening community-based management and peer-learning practices to nurture the fast-growing system of Local Child Guarantee Units and make it less resource intensive to coordinate. A first step could be establishing regional groups of Local Child Guarantee Units to facilitate more efficient coordination, followed by creating a National Network to broaden cooperation and knowledge exchange on implementing the ECG.
Developing a robust monitoring and evaluation system for the ECG to assess policy effectiveness and generate evidence on policy outcomes. Part of this process involves simplifying the monitoring framework to more closely follow the structure of a results-based framework and aligning indicator selection and description of policy measures with those in connected national strategies, where it makes sense. The current indicator set could be strengthened to sharpen the focus on child poverty and children’s access to services to more effectively support policy evaluation and decision-making
Producing comparable information on children in need at the local level to effectively monitor local implementation. Currently, the Local Child Guarantee Units use indicators based on different definitions of the ECG target groups, lack access to data to identify children living in poverty, and lack experience of using relevant data and indicators for policy monitoring and service planning. To build capacity, existing knowledge should be leveraged, with an emphasis on fostering collaboration between the Local Child Guarantee Units and the national authorities.
Strengthening child and youth participation in the implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the ECG national action plan, both at national and local levels. Clarifying roles and responsibilities of Local Units and reinforcing partnerships with youth workers and civil society organisations should be among the priorities. Efforts should be made to broaden participation initiatives beyond schools and strengthen participation opportunities for vulnerable and under-represented children and young people.
This brief summarises the main OECD recommendations and provides some insights from the assessment of the current monitoring system and governance arrangements (OECD, forthcoming[1]).