cover image: Expectations and Aspirations : A New Framework for Education in the Middle East and North Africa : Overview

20.500.12592/tbk1dg

Expectations and Aspirations : A New Framework for Education in the Middle East and North Africa : Overview

13 Nov 2018

Education has a large untapped potential to contribute to human capital, well-being, and wealth in the Middle East and North Africa region (MENA). In fact, it has been at the heart of the region's history and civilizations for centuries. In the 20th century, education was central to countries' struggles for independence, to building modern states and economies, and to defining national identities. Today, MENA has the lowest share of human capital in total wealth globally (Lange, Wodon, and Carey 2018). While the region's young people have attained higher educational levels than their parents, they were not able to translate their educational attainment to greater income opportunities (Narayan et al. 2018). That is, while MENA has the highest absolute intergenerational education mobility compared to other regions in the world, it also has low intergenerational income mobility. In most other regions, educational attainment and incomemobility are well correlated (Narayan et al. 2018). The 435 million residents of MENA are enduring a period of pronounced hardship. Ongoing threats to peace and economic stability are contributing to challenges across numerous sectors. Economic growth has remained persistently low in the aftermath of the Arab Spring (World Bank 2015a), youth unemployment rates have risen, and thequality of public services has deteriorated (Brixi, Lust, and Woolcock 2015; World Bank 2013a). Even in relatively stable countries, labor market outcomes for the educated have worsened (El-Araby 2013; Krafft 2013; Rizk 2016; Salehi-Isfahani, Tunali, and Assaad 2009; Tzannatos, Diwan, and Ahad 2016). Exacerbating these challenges was the substantial downturn in the global oil market, which has placed more pressure on resource-rich countries (IMF 2017) and created an even more urgent need to push for human capital development across MENA.
information and communication technology labor market future of work early childhood education balance of power civil service reform quality of education human capital per capita consumption early childhood development female labor force participation massive open online course internally displaced person human capital theory progress in international reading literacy study role of technology return to education privileges and immunity years of schooling public sector employment labor market outcome human capital development delivery of education education service delivery youth unemployment rate private sector employment quality of public service skill need demand for skill language of instruction employer having investments in education benefits of education enactment of law egra early grade reading assessment labor market issue primary enrollment rate growth in enrollment codes of behavior history of education goals for education forces of change foreign language instruction

Authors

World Bank

Disclosure Date
2018-11-13
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
Overview
Product Line
Advisory Services & Analytics
Published in
United States of America
Rel Proj ID
5M-Flagship On Education In Mena -- P161857
TF No/Name
TF0A6450-World Development Report 2018 Regional Events,TF0A9273-MENA Human Capital: Education and the Future of Work
Total Volume(s)
2
Unit Owning
Education MNA (HMNED)
Version Type
Revised
Volume No
1

Files

Related Topics

All