'Urgent need to invest developing world's youth population'
SINGAPORE: Developing countries which invest in better education,
healthcare, and job training for their record numbers of young people
between the ages of 12 and 24 years, could produce surging economic
growth and sharply reduced poverty, according to a new World Bank report
launched at the Bank's annual meetings in Singapore.
With 1.3 billion young people now living in the developing world the
largest-ever youth group in history, the report says, there has never
been a better time to invest in youth because they are healthier and
better educated than previous generations, and they will join the
workforce with fewer dependents because of changing demographics.
However, failure to seize this opportunity to train them more
effectively for the workplace, and to be active citizens, could lead to
widespread disillusionment and social tensions.
Such large numbers of young people living in developing countries
present great opportunities, but also risks, says Francois Bourguignon,
the World Bank's Chief Economist and Senior Vice President for
Development Economics. The opportunities are great, as many countries
will have a larger, more skilled labour force and fewer dependents. But
these young people must be well-prepared in order to create and find
good jobs.
The report says that young people make up nearly half of the ranks of
the world's unemployed, and, for example, that the Middle East and North
Africa region alone must create 100 million jobs by 2020 in order to
stabilize its employment situation.
Moreover, surveys of young people in East Asia and Eastern Europe and
Central Asia carried out as research for the report indicate that access
to jobs, along with physical security, is their biggest concern. Far too
many young people some 130 million 15-24 year olds, cannot read or
write. Secondary education and skill acquisition make sense only if
primary schooling has been successful.
This is still far from being the case and efforts have to be
reinforced in this area. In addition, more than 20 per cent of firms in
countries such as Algeria, Bangladesh, Brazil, China, Estonia, and
Zambia, rate poor education and work skills among their workforce as a
major or severe obstacle to their operations. Overcoming this handicap
starts with more and better investments in youth.
Most developing countries have a short window of opportunity to get
this right before their record numbers of youth become middle-aged, and
they lose their demographic dividend. This isn't just enlightened social
policy.
This may be one of the profound decisions a developing country will
ever make to banish poverty and galvanize its economy, says Manny
Jimenez, lead author of the report, and Director of Human Development in
the World Bank's East Asia and the Pacific Department.
One study attributes more than 40 per cent of the higher growth in
East Asia over Latin America in 1965-1990 to progressive policies on
macro-economics, trade, education, healthcare, and vocational training,
and the faster growth of its working-age population. Countries that miss
this demographic window will find themselves lagging increasingly
further behind in the global economy.
The report says that most policymakers know that their young people
will greatly influence their national, social and economic fortunes, but
nonetheless face acute dilemmas in how to invest more effectively in
their youth.
The World Development Report identifies three strategic policies that
may enhance investment in young people: (1) Expanding opportunities, (2)
improving capabilities, and (3) offering second chances for young people
who have fallen behind due to difficult circumstances or poor choices.
These address five fundamental transitions facing young people and
affecting their whole economic, social and family life, namely getting
an education, finding work, staying healthy, forming families, and
exercising citizenship.
Opportunities, with broadened opportunities for better education and
healthcare, young people can acquire the life skills to navigate
adolescence and young adulthood safely, while improved vocational
training will help them compete in the workforce.
Youth political participation and involvement in social organisations
is also essential for fostering young people's civic life in their own
communities and also vital for good governance.
Without opportunities for productive civic engagement, young people's
frustrations may boil over into economic and social tensions, creating
long-simmering disputes. For example, the ongoing ethnic conflict in Sri
Lanka between Sinhalese and Tamils was initially caused by the
frustration of Tamil students shut out of university places and denied
other avenues for civic involvement.
Capabilities, providing information to young people and developing
their decision-making skills, especially to stay healthy and appreciate
continued learning, is important. Armed with the right information and
incentives, these young people can make good decisions.
Analysis of India's Better Life Options program, which provides
information on reproductive and health services and vocational training
to young females aged 12-20 in urban slums and rural areas, shows that
youth in the program were significantly more involved in key life
decisions than those who were not.
Second chances, countries need targeted programs for young people who
have fallen behind due to difficult circumstances or poor choices.
These can be dropping out of school, drug addiction, criminal
behaviour, or prolonged unemployment.
Second chances help young people rebuild their future, which has a
long-term beneficial effect on society as a whole. Rehabilitation is
costly, but the payoffs are highest for young people who still have a
lifetime of potential productivity ahead of them.
The report says that 300,000 young people under the age of 18 have
recently been involved in armed conflict, and another 500,000 have been
recruited into military or paramilitary forces. Experience with
demobilization and rehabilitation programs shows that young combatants
can reconstruct their lives with job training and also medical and
psychological support.
While many of these issues may not be solved easily, developing
countries and their young people alike can take heart from dozens of
examples where youth, supported by enlightened policies and public
institutions, have not only coped but flourished.
Young people today have more education, experience greater political
openness, and have increased contact with the outside world through
television, the internet, and migration than any of their predecessors,
and this can ease their transition into being the law-abiding, engaged
citizens of tomorrow, says Mamta Murthi, co-author of the World
Development Report 2007, and a Lead Economist in the World Bank's Europe
and Central Asia Department.
Murthi says that channeling their knowledge and natural creativity
can stimulate economic growth, and produce long-lasting beneficial
effects which will have repercussions far beyond their generation.
Put simply, they will influence the outcomes of the global fight
against poverty over the next 40-50 years.
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