What this tool covers
If your country scores low on Prevention, the first question to ask is: has money been allocated?
This document helps you turn Index findings into a concrete investment case and budget ‘ask’. It walks you through what governments need to budget to improve scores for different indicators, how to time your ‘ask’ to the right moment in the budget cycle, how to estimate a credible figure, and how to argue for the investment.
How to use this tool
Start with the section that matches where you are:
- Building your case? Start with Why finance advocacy matters and Making the investment case.
- Preparing for a meeting or submission? Go to From indicators to budget lines for ready-made ‘asks’, then use Your submission paragraph to draft your written request.
- Not sure about timing? Check When to make budget ‘asks’ to find the right moment in the budget cycle.
- Need a number? Go to How to put a number on your ‘ask’ for five practical costing approaches.
Use this alongside the Fact sheet for background, the Meeting guide when presenting your ask, and the Email templates to follow up in writing.
Your budget submission paragraph
Download this finance advocacy tool and use the material within it to create the following or a similar paragraph that you can include in a written submission, letter, or policy brief.
The Out of the Shadows Index shows that [country] scores [score] on the Prevention theme, which tracks whether a country has put in place the programs, safeguards, and trained professionals needed to stop sexual violence against children before it happens. The key gap identified is [describe the lowest-scoring indicator and what it means in practice — for example: "the national curriculum does not include any content on sexual violence awareness or online safety, meaning children have no formal opportunity to learn how to recognize harm or seek help"]. To close this gap, we request that the [upcoming budget / supplementary estimates / sector plan] include a dedicated allocation of [amount or description] for [specific budget line from the table above — for example: mandatory rollout of age-appropriate prevention education across all lower-secondary schools, or establishment of a nationwide 24/7 child helpline with voice and text options].
Prevention is the most cost-effective investment a government can make. Evidence shows that home visiting programs return between $1.80 and $5.70 for every dollar spent. This allocation would bring [country] in line with [peer country or regional average / international standard / CRC obligations] and ensure that protection reaches children before harm does.
Use this alongside the fact sheet for background, the meeting guide when presenting your ask, and the email templates to follow up in writing.
Download this finance advocacy tool
Created specifically for the Prevention pillar. Learn why finance advocacy matters, how to create targeted ‘asks’ to decision-makers within the right Ministry, when to make budget ‘asks’ timed to your government’s fiscal cycle, and more.