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Maendeleo Vijijini
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Washington, USA
The World Bank unveiled a new plan today to
help African countries strengthen their human capital. The objective of the
plan is to enable Africa’s young people to grow up with optimal health and
equipped with the right skills to compete in the digitizing global economy.
Sub-Saharan Africa scores the lowest of all
the world’s regions on the World Bank’s Human Capital Index, a measurement of
how well countries invest in the next generation of workers. The score is explained by high mortality and
stunting rates in the region, as well as inadequate student learning outcomes –
all of which have a direct effect on economic productivity.
In an effort to help countries turn these
indicators around, the World Bank’s Africa Human Capital Plan is setting
ambitious targets to be achieved in the region by 2023. These include a drastic
reduction in child mortality to save 4 million lives, averting stunting among
11 million children, and increasing learning outcomes for girls and boys in
school by 20%. These achievements can raise Africa’s Human Capital Index score
upwards to increase the productivity of future workers by 13%.
“Preventing a child from fulfilling his or
her potential is not only fundamentally unjust, but it also limits the growth
potential of economies whose future workers are held back. GDP per worker in
Sub-Saharan Africa could be 2.5 times higher if everyone were healthy and
enjoyed a good education from pre-school to secondary school,” says World Bank
Vice President for Africa Hafez Ghanem at the launch of the Bank’s Plan during
the World Bank-IMF Spring Meetings.
The Plan also aims at empowering women to
prevent early marriage and pregnancy for adolescent girls. “The adolescent fertility rate in
Sub-Saharan Africa is 102 births per 1,000 girls—three times as high as in
South Asia. This not only damaging for girls and their children, but it also
hurts economic growth,” noted Ghanem.
The World Bank will increase its
investments in human capital in Africa by 50% in the next funding cycle. This
includes new World Bank grants and concessional finance for human capital
projects in Africa totaling $15 billion in fiscal years 2021-2023. The World Bank will invest these funds
strategically to unblock structural constraints to human capital development.
The World Bank will also target game changing interventions that leverage
technology and innovation and that prevent and reverse damage to human capital
in fragile and conflict-affected settings.
The World Bank is already supporting
countries to come up with new strategies to invest more and better in their
people. Twenty-three African countries, covering over 60% of the region’s
population, have joined a coalition of nearly 60 countries to join the Human
Capital Project, committing to a set of accelerated investments in their human
capital.
“Human Capital Project countries are
breaking away from traditional paradigms to make investment in their people a
priority and are working in a more coordinated way across government to ensure
that households have the right enabling environment to support human capital
formation,” said Annette Dixon, World Bank Vice President for Human
Development.
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