Since November 2004, several French social security organisations – ADECRI (Agency for the Development and Coordination of International Relations), CNAMTS (National Health Insurance Fund for Salaried Workers), ACOSS (Central Agency for Social Security Funds) and EN3S (National School for Social Security) - have been engaged in talks with Algerian social security institutions, and have mandated GIP SPSI to finalise a cooperation agreement with Algeria in the area of social welfare.
The GIP scoping mission took place in March 2006 and involved meetings with the heads of the main Algerian social security institutions, namely, the Director for Social Security of the Ministry of Labour and Social Security, and the heads of:
These highly constructive meetings underlined the similarities between the Algerian and French system and the high expectations of Algeria regarding the cooperation process.
The Algerian authorities formulated a very wide range of requirements and it was therefore necessary to identify and prioritise potential topics for cooperation.
1 - Three topics were accordingly identified:
This topic covers five areas of interest to the Algerian authorities and social protection institutions:
These different issues could be addressed through an exchange of experts and information.
2 - Collection of contributions :
In this area, three potential sub-topics have been identified:
To help the Algerian institutions flesh out their requirements in these areas, the parties agreed on the visit of an Algerian delegation to France to meet with ACOSS and one of the local agencies responsible for collecting contributions (URSSAF).
3 - Training
It was agreed that the Algerian authorities would work with EN3S to determine the content of courses to train social security system specialists (practitioner-advisors, actuaries, IT specialists, contributions inspectors, financial executives, etc.).
The Algerian authorities are eager to proceed rapidly with these reforms. The main programmes envisaged (diagnosis-related payments, official schedules of medical procedures, national agreements and smartcards) should reach the pilot or early development stage by 2006 or 2007.
