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Book
Missing Women and India's Religious Demography
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2009 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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The authors use recent data from the 2006 National Family Health Survey of India to explore the relationship between religion and demographic behavior. They find that fertility and mortality vary not only between religious groups, but also across caste groups. These groups also differ with respect to socio-economic status. The central finding of this paper is that despite their socio-economic disadvantages, Muslims have higher fertility than their Hindu counterparts and also exhibit lower levels of infant mortality (particularly female infant mortality). This effect is robust to the inclusion of controls for non-religious factors such as socio-economic status and area of residence. This result has important policy implications because it suggests that India's problem of "missing women" may be concentrated in particular groups. The authors conclude that religion and caste play a key role in determining the demographic characteristics of India.


Book
Health, Demographic Transition and Economic Growth
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Year: 2010 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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This paper develops a link between four central components of the demographic transition: survival rates; fertility decisions; altruistic intergenerational transfers from workers toward their parents; and economic growth. An increase in child survival is found to reduce the fertility rate and altruistic transfers, and thereby increase the savings rate and the productivity growth rate. The analysis illustrates the key role of child health in the demographic transition.


Book
Health, Demographic Transition and Economic Growth
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Year: 2010 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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This paper develops a link between four central components of the demographic transition: survival rates; fertility decisions; altruistic intergenerational transfers from workers toward their parents; and economic growth. An increase in child survival is found to reduce the fertility rate and altruistic transfers, and thereby increase the savings rate and the productivity growth rate. The analysis illustrates the key role of child health in the demographic transition.


Book
The Role of Training Programs for Youth Employment in Nepal : Impact Evaluation Report on the Employment Fund
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2016 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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The youth unemployment rate is exceptionally high in developing countries. Because the quality of education is arguably one of the most important determinants of youth's labor force participation, governments worldwide have responded by creating job training and placement services programs. Despite the rapid expansion of skill-enhancement employment programs across the world and the long history of training program evaluations, debates about the causal impact of training-based labor market policies on employment outcomes still persist. Using a quasi-experimental approach, this report presents the short-run effects of skills training and employment placement services in Nepal. Launched in 2009, the intervention provided skills training and employment placement services for more than 40,000 Nepalese youth over a three-year period, including a specialized adolescent girls' initiative that reached 4,410 women ages 16 to 24. The report finds that after three years of the program, the Employment Fund intervention positively improved employment outcomes. Participation in the Employment Fund training program generated an increase in non-farm employment of 15 to 16 percentage points for an overall gain of about 50 percent. The program also generated an average monthly earnings gain of about 72 percent. The report finds significantly larger employment impacts for women than for men, but younger women ages 16 to 24 experienced the same improvements as older females. These employment estimates are comparable, although somewhat higher, than other recent experimental interventions in developing countries.

Keywords

Abuse --- Access & Equity in Basic Education --- Adolescent Girls --- Both Sexes --- Capacity Building --- Childbirth --- Children --- Civil Conflict --- Classroom --- Completion Rates --- Contraception --- Control Over Resources --- Curriculum --- Developing Countries --- Development Policy --- Disadvantaged Groups --- Discrimination --- Dropout --- Dropout Rates --- Early Intervention --- Economic Empowerment --- Economic Growth --- Economic Resources --- Economic Status --- Education --- Education for All --- Educational Attainment --- Employment Opportunities --- Enrollment --- Ethnic Groups --- Ex-Combatants --- Exams --- Female Participants --- Female Students --- Fertility --- Fertility Preferences --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Literacy --- Food Insecurity --- Food Security --- Formal Education --- Gender Differences --- Gender Discrimination --- Gender Equality --- Girls --- Groups --- Health, Nutrition and Population --- HIV --- Household Assets --- Household Food Security --- Household Income --- Household Level --- Household Size --- Human Capital --- Important Policy --- Income-Generating Activities --- Indigenous Peoples --- International Labor Organization --- Interventions --- Investment --- Job Opportunities --- Job Training --- Knowledge --- Labor Force --- Labor Market --- Labour Market --- Leadership --- Learning --- Level of Education --- Life Skills --- Literacy --- Livelihood Skills --- Mandates --- Marital Status --- Marriage --- Meat --- Migrants --- Migration --- Ministry of Education --- Minority --- Number of Children --- Older Women --- Outreach Activities --- Participation --- Pensions --- Physical Health --- Pilot Projects --- Policy --- Policy Discussions --- Policy Implications --- Policy Makers --- Policy Research --- Policy Research Working Paper --- Population --- Population Policies --- Practitioners --- Pregnancy --- Primary Education --- Progress --- Public Health --- Quality of Education --- Radio --- Reasoning --- Regular Attendance --- Remittances --- Reproductive Health --- Science --- Self-Confidence --- Service Delivery --- Service Providers --- Sex --- Sexually Active --- Skills --- Skills Development --- Skills Training --- Social Norms --- Social Science --- Sponsors --- Students --- Substance Abuse --- Technical Education --- Technical Skills --- Technical Training --- Training --- Training Opportunities --- Training Programs --- Training Services --- Unemployment --- Values --- Vocational Education --- Vocational Training --- Vulnerability --- Vulnerable Groups --- Women --- Workshops --- Young Men --- Young People --- Young Women --- Youth


Book
The Role of Training Programs for Youth Employment in Nepal : Impact Evaluation Report on the Employment Fund
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2016 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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Abstract

The youth unemployment rate is exceptionally high in developing countries. Because the quality of education is arguably one of the most important determinants of youth's labor force participation, governments worldwide have responded by creating job training and placement services programs. Despite the rapid expansion of skill-enhancement employment programs across the world and the long history of training program evaluations, debates about the causal impact of training-based labor market policies on employment outcomes still persist. Using a quasi-experimental approach, this report presents the short-run effects of skills training and employment placement services in Nepal. Launched in 2009, the intervention provided skills training and employment placement services for more than 40,000 Nepalese youth over a three-year period, including a specialized adolescent girls' initiative that reached 4,410 women ages 16 to 24. The report finds that after three years of the program, the Employment Fund intervention positively improved employment outcomes. Participation in the Employment Fund training program generated an increase in non-farm employment of 15 to 16 percentage points for an overall gain of about 50 percent. The program also generated an average monthly earnings gain of about 72 percent. The report finds significantly larger employment impacts for women than for men, but younger women ages 16 to 24 experienced the same improvements as older females. These employment estimates are comparable, although somewhat higher, than other recent experimental interventions in developing countries.

Keywords

Abuse --- Access & Equity in Basic Education --- Adolescent Girls --- Both Sexes --- Capacity Building --- Childbirth --- Children --- Civil Conflict --- Classroom --- Completion Rates --- Contraception --- Control Over Resources --- Curriculum --- Developing Countries --- Development Policy --- Disadvantaged Groups --- Discrimination --- Dropout --- Dropout Rates --- Early Intervention --- Economic Empowerment --- Economic Growth --- Economic Resources --- Economic Status --- Education --- Education for All --- Educational Attainment --- Employment Opportunities --- Enrollment --- Ethnic Groups --- Ex-Combatants --- Exams --- Female Participants --- Female Students --- Fertility --- Fertility Preferences --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Literacy --- Food Insecurity --- Food Security --- Formal Education --- Gender Differences --- Gender Discrimination --- Gender Equality --- Girls --- Groups --- Health, Nutrition and Population --- HIV --- Household Assets --- Household Food Security --- Household Income --- Household Level --- Household Size --- Human Capital --- Important Policy --- Income-Generating Activities --- Indigenous Peoples --- International Labor Organization --- Interventions --- Investment --- Job Opportunities --- Job Training --- Knowledge --- Labor Force --- Labor Market --- Labour Market --- Leadership --- Learning --- Level of Education --- Life Skills --- Literacy --- Livelihood Skills --- Mandates --- Marital Status --- Marriage --- Meat --- Migrants --- Migration --- Ministry of Education --- Minority --- Number of Children --- Older Women --- Outreach Activities --- Participation --- Pensions --- Physical Health --- Pilot Projects --- Policy --- Policy Discussions --- Policy Implications --- Policy Makers --- Policy Research --- Policy Research Working Paper --- Population --- Population Policies --- Practitioners --- Pregnancy --- Primary Education --- Progress --- Public Health --- Quality of Education --- Radio --- Reasoning --- Regular Attendance --- Remittances --- Reproductive Health --- Science --- Self-Confidence --- Service Delivery --- Service Providers --- Sex --- Sexually Active --- Skills --- Skills Development --- Skills Training --- Social Norms --- Social Science --- Sponsors --- Students --- Substance Abuse --- Technical Education --- Technical Skills --- Technical Training --- Training --- Training Opportunities --- Training Programs --- Training Services --- Unemployment --- Values --- Vocational Education --- Vocational Training --- Vulnerability --- Vulnerable Groups --- Women --- Workshops --- Young Men --- Young People --- Young Women --- Youth


Book
Charter School Entry and School Choice : The Case of Washington, D.C..
Authors: ---
Year: 2015 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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Abstract

This paper develops and estimates an equilibrium model of charter school entry and school choice. In the model, households choose among public, private, and charter schools, and a regulator authorizes charter entry and mandates charter exit. The model is estimated for Washington, D.C. According to the estimates, charters generate net social gains by providing additional school options, and they benefit non-white, low-income, and middle-school students the most. Further, policies that raise the supply of prospective charter entrants in combination with high authorization standards enhance social welfare.

Keywords

Academic achievement --- Academic performance --- Academic programs --- Academic viability --- Academic year --- Achievement data --- Alternative schools --- Average class size --- Average number of children --- Black students --- Board of education --- Catholic schools --- Class size --- Classroom --- College --- Comprehensive assessment --- Cultural policy --- Culture & development --- Curricula --- Curriculum --- Early childhood --- Economics of education --- Educated parents --- Education --- Education for all --- Education reform --- Education statistics --- Education students --- Educational attainment --- Educational costs --- Effective schools --- Elementary school --- Elementary schools --- Enrollment by grade --- Enrollment data --- Ethnic composition --- Faculty --- Faculty development --- Fees --- Formula funding --- Geographic distribution --- Graduation rate --- Graduation rates --- High school --- High schools --- Knowledge --- Language curriculum --- Learning --- Literature --- Low enrollments --- Low-income students --- Middle school --- Middle school students --- Middle schools --- Ministry of education --- Net social gain --- Number of schools --- Number of students --- Open access --- Papers --- Parental income --- Partnerships in education --- Primary education --- Private school --- Private schools --- Public school --- Public school system --- Public schools --- Pupil funding --- Quality schools --- Racial segregation --- Reading --- Regular schools --- Research --- Research report --- Researchers --- School --- School attendance --- School buildings --- School climate --- School cost --- School costs --- School data --- School day --- School district --- School effectiveness --- School enrollment --- School enrolment --- School entry --- School experience --- School funding --- School leaders --- School level --- School levels --- School location --- School performance --- School principals --- School quality --- School reform --- School students --- School supply --- School survey --- School system --- School tuition --- School year --- School-age --- School-age children --- School-age population --- School-year --- Schooling --- Schools --- Science --- Secondary education --- Social science --- Social welfare --- Special education --- Student --- Student achievement --- Student body --- Student choice --- Student costs --- Student demand --- Student group --- Student groups --- Student population --- Students --- Teacher --- Teachers --- Teaching --- Teaching methods --- Tertiary education --- Tuition --- University --- Urban school --- Urban schools --- Values --- Vocational schools

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