Liberia Skills Development Constraints for Youth in the Informal Sector
The labor force in Liberia is quite young. Youth aged 15 to 34 constitute over a third of thepopulation in Liberia and are somewhat concentrated in urban areas, according to the 2008census. These youth represent both a demographic dividend and a co...
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Format: | Report |
Language: | English en_US |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2016
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/736001477423283461/Liberia-Skills-development-constraints-for-youth-in-the-informal-sector http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25360 |
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Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
SKILLS SANITATION ACADEMIC SKILLS SCHOOL SYSTEM LITERACY DEVELOPMENT BASIC EDUCATION TEACHERS ENROLLMENT OF MALES STUDENT-TEACHER RATIO PRIVATE ENTERPRISES SCHOOLING TUITION NUMERACY EQUITABLE ACCESS ENROLLMENT SKILLS DEVELOPMENT SCHOOL ENROLLMENT GROUPS HIGHER LEVELS OF EDUCATION LEVELS OF EDUCATION HIGH SCHOOL LIFE SKILLS EDUCATION OUTCOMES HIGHER EDUCATION BASIC KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION FOR YOUTH LEARNING MATERIALS ACCESS TO TRAINING BASIC READING TRAINING PROGRAMS ADULTS RURAL LOCATIONS GENDER BIAS EXAMS EXAM TRAINING CENTERS TRAINEES LITERACY TEXTBOOKS KNOWLEDGE COURSE CONTENT QUALITY OF EDUCATION TRAINING TEACHING RESOURCES EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT UNEMPLOYED YOUTH SECONDARY SCHOOL TRAINING MATERIALS SCHOOL CURRICULUM LOW LEVELS OF EDUCATION AVERAGE EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT VOCATIONAL EDUCATION BASIC PRIMARY EDUCATION LEARNING FORMAL TRAINING EDUCATION SYSTEM JOB TRAINING LEARNING RESOURCES PRIMARY SCHOOL ACCESS TO COMPUTERS TEACHING QUALITY TEACHERS YOUTH PARTICIPATION RADIO NEWSPAPERS SKILL ACQUISITION LEARNERS READING VOCATIONAL TRAINING SKILLS ACQUISITION LITERACY SKILLS TRAINING COURSES SKILLS TRAINING ATTITUDES EQUAL ACCESS DAILY ATTENDANCE GENDER DIFFERENCES ADOLESCENT GIRLS SCHOOLS ACCESS TO CAPITAL SCHOOL ATTENDANCE SCHOOL CERTIFICATE PARTICIPATION LEARNING OUTCOMES AVERAGE LEVEL OF EDUCATION AGE GROUPS ENTRANCE EXAM SCHOOL GRADUATES EDUCATIONAL QUALITY YOUTH DISADVANTAGED GROUPS CLASS SIZE LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS INFORMAL EDUCATION CURRICULUM TEACHER TEACHER RATIO CHILDREN LEVEL OF EDUCATION CLASS ROOM EDUCATION SKILL DEVELOPMENT TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES ASSESSMENT METHODS CLASS SIZES VOCATIONAL SKILLS FEMALE YOUTH RURAL AREAS BASIC SKILLS NO ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY INSTRUCTION YOUNG PEOPLE GIRLS STUDENTS NUMBER OF STUDENTS FEES PRIMARY EDUCATION WOMEN FORMAL SCHOOLING CLASSROOM CLASSROOMS PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENT SCHOOL SECONDARY EDUCATION QUALITY OF TEACHERS YOUTH POPULATION LEARNING ACTIVITIES HUMAN DEVELOPMENT RETURNS TO EDUCATION |
spellingShingle |
SKILLS SANITATION ACADEMIC SKILLS SCHOOL SYSTEM LITERACY DEVELOPMENT BASIC EDUCATION TEACHERS ENROLLMENT OF MALES STUDENT-TEACHER RATIO PRIVATE ENTERPRISES SCHOOLING TUITION NUMERACY EQUITABLE ACCESS ENROLLMENT SKILLS DEVELOPMENT SCHOOL ENROLLMENT GROUPS HIGHER LEVELS OF EDUCATION LEVELS OF EDUCATION HIGH SCHOOL LIFE SKILLS EDUCATION OUTCOMES HIGHER EDUCATION BASIC KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION FOR YOUTH LEARNING MATERIALS ACCESS TO TRAINING BASIC READING TRAINING PROGRAMS ADULTS RURAL LOCATIONS GENDER BIAS EXAMS EXAM TRAINING CENTERS TRAINEES LITERACY TEXTBOOKS KNOWLEDGE COURSE CONTENT QUALITY OF EDUCATION TRAINING TEACHING RESOURCES EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT UNEMPLOYED YOUTH SECONDARY SCHOOL TRAINING MATERIALS SCHOOL CURRICULUM LOW LEVELS OF EDUCATION AVERAGE EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT VOCATIONAL EDUCATION BASIC PRIMARY EDUCATION LEARNING FORMAL TRAINING EDUCATION SYSTEM JOB TRAINING LEARNING RESOURCES PRIMARY SCHOOL ACCESS TO COMPUTERS TEACHING QUALITY TEACHERS YOUTH PARTICIPATION RADIO NEWSPAPERS SKILL ACQUISITION LEARNERS READING VOCATIONAL TRAINING SKILLS ACQUISITION LITERACY SKILLS TRAINING COURSES SKILLS TRAINING ATTITUDES EQUAL ACCESS DAILY ATTENDANCE GENDER DIFFERENCES ADOLESCENT GIRLS SCHOOLS ACCESS TO CAPITAL SCHOOL ATTENDANCE SCHOOL CERTIFICATE PARTICIPATION LEARNING OUTCOMES AVERAGE LEVEL OF EDUCATION AGE GROUPS ENTRANCE EXAM SCHOOL GRADUATES EDUCATIONAL QUALITY YOUTH DISADVANTAGED GROUPS CLASS SIZE LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS INFORMAL EDUCATION CURRICULUM TEACHER TEACHER RATIO CHILDREN LEVEL OF EDUCATION CLASS ROOM EDUCATION SKILL DEVELOPMENT TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES ASSESSMENT METHODS CLASS SIZES VOCATIONAL SKILLS FEMALE YOUTH RURAL AREAS BASIC SKILLS NO ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY INSTRUCTION YOUNG PEOPLE GIRLS STUDENTS NUMBER OF STUDENTS FEES PRIMARY EDUCATION WOMEN FORMAL SCHOOLING CLASSROOM CLASSROOMS PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENT SCHOOL SECONDARY EDUCATION QUALITY OF TEACHERS YOUTH POPULATION LEARNING ACTIVITIES HUMAN DEVELOPMENT RETURNS TO EDUCATION World Bank Liberia Skills Development Constraints for Youth in the Informal Sector |
geographic_facet |
Africa Liberia |
description |
The labor force in Liberia is quite
young. Youth aged 15 to 34 constitute over a third of
thepopulation in Liberia and are somewhat concentrated in
urban areas, according to the 2008census. These youth
represent both a demographic dividend and a concern. The
educational attainment of Liberian youth is steadily
improving but remains low on average.Youth recognize that
their lack of skills and experience are impediments to
employment.The objective of this report is to assess youth
skills development in Liberia.Given the composition of
Liberia’s economy and the concentration of the labor force
outside formal employment, this report has a particular
focus on skill development in vocational trades and the
informal sector. This report comprises three analyses.
Section Two constructs a profile of Liberian youth from
existing administrative data are studied to enable a more
detailed understanding of the current skill levels among
working youth. Section Three first assesses skills
development providers based on new survey data summarizes
the results of original analysis carried out on data
collected on a sample of 139 skill providers’ training
offerings, capacity, target beneficiaries, and other
criteria. Next section three goes on to present young
trainees’ perceptions of skills development opportunities
and limits, based on 354 interviews with recent trainees.
This report contributes to the Government of Liberia’s
Agenda for Transformation (AfT) and the World Bank’s Country
Partnership Strategy (CPS) 2013-2017. Both recognize that
inadequate skills and vulnerable employment are key
constrictions on rapid, inclusive and sustainable
growth.This report provides practical recommendations that
align with pillars of the National Technical and Vocational
Education and Training (TVET) Policy 2015-2020. This report
makes recommendations specific to three pillars: promoting
productivity in the agricultural sector through TVET,
promoting productivity in the informal sector through TVET,
and financing TVET. |
format |
Report |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Liberia Skills Development Constraints for Youth in the Informal Sector |
title_short |
Liberia Skills Development Constraints for Youth in the Informal Sector |
title_full |
Liberia Skills Development Constraints for Youth in the Informal Sector |
title_fullStr |
Liberia Skills Development Constraints for Youth in the Informal Sector |
title_full_unstemmed |
Liberia Skills Development Constraints for Youth in the Informal Sector |
title_sort |
liberia skills development constraints for youth in the informal sector |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/736001477423283461/Liberia-Skills-development-constraints-for-youth-in-the-informal-sector http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25360 |
_version_ |
1764459026992594944 |
spelling |
okr-10986-253602021-05-25T09:53:04Z Liberia Skills Development Constraints for Youth in the Informal Sector World Bank SKILLS SANITATION ACADEMIC SKILLS SCHOOL SYSTEM LITERACY DEVELOPMENT BASIC EDUCATION TEACHERS ENROLLMENT OF MALES STUDENT-TEACHER RATIO PRIVATE ENTERPRISES SCHOOLING TUITION NUMERACY EQUITABLE ACCESS ENROLLMENT SKILLS DEVELOPMENT SCHOOL ENROLLMENT GROUPS HIGHER LEVELS OF EDUCATION LEVELS OF EDUCATION HIGH SCHOOL LIFE SKILLS EDUCATION OUTCOMES HIGHER EDUCATION BASIC KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION FOR YOUTH LEARNING MATERIALS ACCESS TO TRAINING BASIC READING TRAINING PROGRAMS ADULTS RURAL LOCATIONS GENDER BIAS EXAMS EXAM TRAINING CENTERS TRAINEES LITERACY TEXTBOOKS KNOWLEDGE COURSE CONTENT QUALITY OF EDUCATION TRAINING TEACHING RESOURCES EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT UNEMPLOYED YOUTH SECONDARY SCHOOL TRAINING MATERIALS SCHOOL CURRICULUM LOW LEVELS OF EDUCATION AVERAGE EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT VOCATIONAL EDUCATION BASIC PRIMARY EDUCATION LEARNING FORMAL TRAINING EDUCATION SYSTEM JOB TRAINING LEARNING RESOURCES PRIMARY SCHOOL ACCESS TO COMPUTERS TEACHING QUALITY TEACHERS YOUTH PARTICIPATION RADIO NEWSPAPERS SKILL ACQUISITION LEARNERS READING VOCATIONAL TRAINING SKILLS ACQUISITION LITERACY SKILLS TRAINING COURSES SKILLS TRAINING ATTITUDES EQUAL ACCESS DAILY ATTENDANCE GENDER DIFFERENCES ADOLESCENT GIRLS SCHOOLS ACCESS TO CAPITAL SCHOOL ATTENDANCE SCHOOL CERTIFICATE PARTICIPATION LEARNING OUTCOMES AVERAGE LEVEL OF EDUCATION AGE GROUPS ENTRANCE EXAM SCHOOL GRADUATES EDUCATIONAL QUALITY YOUTH DISADVANTAGED GROUPS CLASS SIZE LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS INFORMAL EDUCATION CURRICULUM TEACHER TEACHER RATIO CHILDREN LEVEL OF EDUCATION CLASS ROOM EDUCATION SKILL DEVELOPMENT TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES ASSESSMENT METHODS CLASS SIZES VOCATIONAL SKILLS FEMALE YOUTH RURAL AREAS BASIC SKILLS NO ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY INSTRUCTION YOUNG PEOPLE GIRLS STUDENTS NUMBER OF STUDENTS FEES PRIMARY EDUCATION WOMEN FORMAL SCHOOLING CLASSROOM CLASSROOMS PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENT SCHOOL SECONDARY EDUCATION QUALITY OF TEACHERS YOUTH POPULATION LEARNING ACTIVITIES HUMAN DEVELOPMENT RETURNS TO EDUCATION The labor force in Liberia is quite young. Youth aged 15 to 34 constitute over a third of thepopulation in Liberia and are somewhat concentrated in urban areas, according to the 2008census. These youth represent both a demographic dividend and a concern. The educational attainment of Liberian youth is steadily improving but remains low on average.Youth recognize that their lack of skills and experience are impediments to employment.The objective of this report is to assess youth skills development in Liberia.Given the composition of Liberia’s economy and the concentration of the labor force outside formal employment, this report has a particular focus on skill development in vocational trades and the informal sector. This report comprises three analyses. Section Two constructs a profile of Liberian youth from existing administrative data are studied to enable a more detailed understanding of the current skill levels among working youth. Section Three first assesses skills development providers based on new survey data summarizes the results of original analysis carried out on data collected on a sample of 139 skill providers’ training offerings, capacity, target beneficiaries, and other criteria. Next section three goes on to present young trainees’ perceptions of skills development opportunities and limits, based on 354 interviews with recent trainees. This report contributes to the Government of Liberia’s Agenda for Transformation (AfT) and the World Bank’s Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) 2013-2017. Both recognize that inadequate skills and vulnerable employment are key constrictions on rapid, inclusive and sustainable growth.This report provides practical recommendations that align with pillars of the National Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Policy 2015-2020. This report makes recommendations specific to three pillars: promoting productivity in the agricultural sector through TVET, promoting productivity in the informal sector through TVET, and financing TVET. 2016-11-16T21:23:52Z 2016-11-16T21:23:52Z 2016-06-09 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/736001477423283461/Liberia-Skills-development-constraints-for-youth-in-the-informal-sector http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25360 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Education Study Economic & Sector Work Africa Liberia |