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The Skills Balancing Act in Sub-Saharan Africa

David K. Evans - Indhira Santos - Omar Arias
pubblicato da World Bank Publications

Prezzo online:
30,25
37,73
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37,73

Despite strong recent economic growth, Sub-Saharan Africa has levels of economic transformation, poverty reduction, and skill development far below those of other regions. Smart investments in developing skillsaligned with the policy goals of productivity growth, inclusion, and adaptabilitycan help to accelerate the region's economic transformation in the 21st century. Sub-Saharan Africa's growing working-age population presents a major opportunity to increase shared prosperity. Countries in the region have invested heavily in building skills; public expenditure on education increased sevenfold over the past 30 years, and more children are in school today than ever before. Yet, systems for building skills in this population have fallen short, and these shortcomings significantly impede economic prospects. In half of the countries, fewer than two in every three children complete primary school; even fewer reach and complete higher levels of education. Learning outcomes have been persistently poor, leading to substantial gaps in basic cognitive skillsliteracy and numeracyamong children, young people, and adults. The literacy rate of the adult population is below 50 percent in many countries; functional literacy and numeracy rates are even lower. Systemwide change is required to achieve significant progress. Multiple agencies at the central and local levels are involved in skills development strategies, making skills "everyone's problem but no one's responsibility.? Policies and reforms need to build capacity for evidence-based policies and create incentives to align the behaviors of all stakeholders with the pursuit of national skills development goals. The Skills Balancing Act in Sub-Saharan Africa: Investing in Skills for Productivity, Inclusivity, and Adaptability lays out evidence to inform the policy choices that countries will make in skill investments. Each chapter addresses a set of specific questions, drawing on original analysis and synthesis of existing studies to explore key areas: How the skills appropriate to each stage of the life cycle are acquired and what market and institutional failures affect skills formation What systems are needed for individuals to access these skills, including family investments, private sector institutions, schools, and other public programs How those systems can be strengthened How the most vulnerable individualsthose who fall outside the standard systems and have missed critical building blocks in skills acquisitioncan be supported. Countries will face trade-offsoften stark onesthat will have distributional impacts and a bearing on their development path. Committed leaders, reform coalitions, and well-coordinated policies are essential for taking on the skills balancing act in Sub-Saharan Africa.

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