Enhancing Female Entrepreneurship through Cash Grants : Experimental Evidence from Rural Tunisia

In Tunisia, while social protection and labor programs are in place, severe challenges including inefficiency, fragmentation, and inequity limit the country’s ability to respond to increasing social needs. Gender issues are also one of the critical...

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Main Authors: Ferrah, Samih, Gazeaud, Jules, Khan, Nausheen, Mvukiyehe, Eric, Shrotri, Varada, Sterck, Olivier, Zineb, Samir Ben
Other Authors: Mottaghi, Lili
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/641181624972357747/Enhancing-Female-Entrepreneurship-through-Cash-Grants-Experimental-Evidence-from-Rural-Tunisia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35863
id okr-10986-35863
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-358632022-02-09T14:41:49Z Enhancing Female Entrepreneurship through Cash Grants : Experimental Evidence from Rural Tunisia Ferrah, Samih Gazeaud, Jules Khan, Nausheen Mvukiyehe, Eric Shrotri, Varada Sterck, Olivier Zineb, Samir Ben Mottaghi, Lili FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS CASH TRANSFERS ENTREPRENEURSHIP WOMEN'S AGENCY LIVESTOCK MIGRATION GENDER INNOVATION LAB GENDER POLICY In Tunisia, while social protection and labor programs are in place, severe challenges including inefficiency, fragmentation, and inequity limit the country’s ability to respond to increasing social needs. Gender issues are also one of the critical areas since young women are experiencing even more severe challenges getting into the tight labor market than young men. Unemployment in the MENA region has been a challenge for some time, markedly during the Arab Spring, resulting in the need to create over 50 million jobs in the region in the next decade, to ensure socio-political stability. Unemployment rates are highest in rural and low-income areas. It is in this context that a pilot project of Community Works andLocal Participation (CWLP) was initiated in rural Jendouba in 2015. It was financed by the Japan Social Development Fund (JSDF) through the World Bank and implemented by the Tunisia Republic’s Ministry of Vocational Training and Employment (MVTE). A rigorous randomized control trial (RCT) was embedded in the second phase of the CWLP roll-out (starting in late 2015 and early 2016) and carried out by the World Bank’sDIME Department in partnership with MVET’s ONEQ. The study’s main objective was to capture the effects of CWLP’s cash for work activities. The results of this study, based on a detailed survey of over 4,000 participants and non-participants 6-12 months after completion of project activities, suggested that in general, the CWLP has had positive impacts on the economic well-being of beneficiaries and to a small extent on social and psychological well-being. However, these results also raised concerns that these positive effects may not persist in the long-run, particularly for women who still face huge constraints participating in the tight labor market, which has yet to fully recover to pre-Jasmine revolution levels. 2021-06-29T16:59:11Z 2021-06-29T16:59:11Z 2021-07 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/641181624972357747/Enhancing-Female-Entrepreneurship-through-Cash-Grants-Experimental-Evidence-from-Rural-Tunisia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35863 English Evidence to Inform Policy; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Women in Development and Gender Study Middle East and North Africa Tunisia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
CASH TRANSFERS
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
WOMEN'S AGENCY
LIVESTOCK
MIGRATION
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
GENDER POLICY
spellingShingle FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
CASH TRANSFERS
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
WOMEN'S AGENCY
LIVESTOCK
MIGRATION
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
GENDER POLICY
Ferrah, Samih
Gazeaud, Jules
Khan, Nausheen
Mvukiyehe, Eric
Shrotri, Varada
Sterck, Olivier
Zineb, Samir Ben
Enhancing Female Entrepreneurship through Cash Grants : Experimental Evidence from Rural Tunisia
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Tunisia
relation Evidence to Inform Policy;
description In Tunisia, while social protection and labor programs are in place, severe challenges including inefficiency, fragmentation, and inequity limit the country’s ability to respond to increasing social needs. Gender issues are also one of the critical areas since young women are experiencing even more severe challenges getting into the tight labor market than young men. Unemployment in the MENA region has been a challenge for some time, markedly during the Arab Spring, resulting in the need to create over 50 million jobs in the region in the next decade, to ensure socio-political stability. Unemployment rates are highest in rural and low-income areas. It is in this context that a pilot project of Community Works andLocal Participation (CWLP) was initiated in rural Jendouba in 2015. It was financed by the Japan Social Development Fund (JSDF) through the World Bank and implemented by the Tunisia Republic’s Ministry of Vocational Training and Employment (MVTE). A rigorous randomized control trial (RCT) was embedded in the second phase of the CWLP roll-out (starting in late 2015 and early 2016) and carried out by the World Bank’sDIME Department in partnership with MVET’s ONEQ. The study’s main objective was to capture the effects of CWLP’s cash for work activities. The results of this study, based on a detailed survey of over 4,000 participants and non-participants 6-12 months after completion of project activities, suggested that in general, the CWLP has had positive impacts on the economic well-being of beneficiaries and to a small extent on social and psychological well-being. However, these results also raised concerns that these positive effects may not persist in the long-run, particularly for women who still face huge constraints participating in the tight labor market, which has yet to fully recover to pre-Jasmine revolution levels.
author2 Mottaghi, Lili
author_facet Mottaghi, Lili
Ferrah, Samih
Gazeaud, Jules
Khan, Nausheen
Mvukiyehe, Eric
Shrotri, Varada
Sterck, Olivier
Zineb, Samir Ben
format Report
author Ferrah, Samih
Gazeaud, Jules
Khan, Nausheen
Mvukiyehe, Eric
Shrotri, Varada
Sterck, Olivier
Zineb, Samir Ben
author_sort Ferrah, Samih
title Enhancing Female Entrepreneurship through Cash Grants : Experimental Evidence from Rural Tunisia
title_short Enhancing Female Entrepreneurship through Cash Grants : Experimental Evidence from Rural Tunisia
title_full Enhancing Female Entrepreneurship through Cash Grants : Experimental Evidence from Rural Tunisia
title_fullStr Enhancing Female Entrepreneurship through Cash Grants : Experimental Evidence from Rural Tunisia
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing Female Entrepreneurship through Cash Grants : Experimental Evidence from Rural Tunisia
title_sort enhancing female entrepreneurship through cash grants : experimental evidence from rural tunisia
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/641181624972357747/Enhancing-Female-Entrepreneurship-through-Cash-Grants-Experimental-Evidence-from-Rural-Tunisia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35863
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