yia_ethiopia_pos_baseline_report_december_2016_si.pdf_2.png
Study: Research

Findings from the Pre-Test Data Analysis in Ethiopia’s Program Outcomes Study

Publication year:

2016

English

Format:

pdf (728.0 KiB)

Publisher:

Save the Children,Search Institute

About 89 million youth between the ages of 12-24 are part of a growing cohort of out-of-school youth, approximately half of whom live in Sub-Saharan Africa. While many of these youth aspire to be active members of their community, many out-of-school rural youth face limited formal socioeconomic opportunities, and are often unable to access systems and structures to help their aspirations.

This situation is especially true for Ethiopia, a country that has a notably young population. 45% of the ~90 million Ethiopians are under the age of 15 years while ~70% of the populations is under the age of 30 years. And this youth bulge is projected to remain at this level as the population grows to ~127 million by 20379. This youth bulge is accompanied by a moderate rate of unemployment of youth (15-24 years) in Ethiopia, with some projections noting a youth unemployment rate of 8% in 2014. Youth unemployment is more prevalent in urban areas compared to rural areas; however, the youth unemployment rates in rural areas is confounded by the high

rates of underemployment for rural youth.

In response to this, the Youth in Action (YiA) program was implemented by Save the Children in partnership with Mastercard Foundation. The goal of YiA is to improve the socioeconomic status of around 40,000 out-of-school young people (12-18 years), both girls and boys, in rural Burkina Faso, Egypt, Ethiopia, Malawi, and Uganda.

This report presents findings on the YiA program in Ethiopia. The baseline data from this program Outcomes Study (POS) will be used for two purposes:

1. Construct a profile of what youth work readiness and socioeconomic outcomes look like when youth

enter YiA

2. Understand the descriptive relationship between the work readiness skills, and between intermediate and

socioeconomic outcomes at baseline.

Read full abstract

View & Download

English

1 Documents

Document information

Subscribe and receive reading selections

Save all your favorite materials for future use

Upload research & contribute to the collection

Share

Link