Ghana Learns from Youth Employment Programs and Social Safety Nets in Latin America & the Caribbean
As part of the South-South Initiative launched by World Bank Group President Zoellick in 2008, a high-level delegation from Ghana which included the Ministry of Local Government and Development, the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning, and the Council for Technical and Vocational Education and Training participated in a two week study tour to Bolivia, the Dominican Republic and Jamaica in May. The objective was to learn more about the design, execution, and evaluation of social protection programs and policies in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) and to share experiences from various programs in Ghana.
The exchange focused on active labor market policies and youth employment initiatives targeted at less-educated youth–a group that faces considerable barriers to labor market success in both LAC and Africa. The Ghana delegation also examined major instruments of social assistance in LAC including conditional cash transfers to poor and vulnerable households.
The delegation directly observed the functioning of a number of World Bank-financed programs. They visited a health center in Bolivia where a nation-wide program provides cash transfers to pregnant women on condition they attend regular prenatal and postnatal checkups; took a guided tour through the Dominican Republic’s INFOTEP training institute where poor youth are taught technical and cognitive skills for an array of professions; and went to a youth information center in one of Jamaica’s poorest parishes where adolescents freely discuss and access information on issues concerning them and their communities. These and other activities provided a unique opportunity to learn from the region’s success and export some lessons and instruments to Ghana and beyond.
Host countries acquired knowledge from the Ghana’s National Youth Employment Program (NYEP), introduced in 2006 to address the growing number of poor youth entering the labor force each year and the Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty Programme (LEAP), which seeks to stimulate consumption, employment, and human capital amongst extremely poor and vulnerable people in Ghana.
The objective of the South-South Initiative is to provide a simple, low-cost way for policy makers and development practitioners in developing countries to share their knowledge and expertise in overcoming poverty. Financing of this exchange was made possible by the institutional strengthening component of the Ghana Social Opportunities project, a US$ 88 million operation aimed at improving social spending and providing income-generating opportunities for the poor.
Mission delegates will disseminate findings and recommendations emerging from this exchange to a broader audience in Ghana and lessons learned will be applied to the national context in an endeavor to improve the country’s youth employment and social protection strategies.
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This article was originally posted on Sustainable Development Africa Platform
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