reproductive health of adolescent girls: perspectives from wdr07 emmanuel jimenez december 1, 2009

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Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009 www.worldbank.org/wdr2007

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Page 1: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07

Emmanuel Jimenez

December 1, 2009

www.worldbank.org/wdr2007

Page 2: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Motivation

Investing in in the human capital of young people (12-24 years) is key to development: A higher base on which to build human

capital to grow and reduce poverty

Page 3: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

3

But new challenges for youth

HIV prevalence rate (%) in young (15-24) pregnant women

0

10

20

30

40

50

Source: UNAIDS

Page 4: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Motivation

Investing in in the human capital of young people (12-24 years) is key to development: A higher base on which to build human

capital to grow and reduce poverty A large youth cohort is a potential

demographic dividend

Page 5: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Structure of the WDR

5 Transitions 3 Policy Lenses

Page 6: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Human capital during 5 youth transitions key for poverty reduction and growth

12

100 % of Cohort

Age24

Learning in school after primary-age Working

Forming families

Participating in civic lifeTaking health risks

Page 7: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

3 types of questions asked of each transition: a ‘youth lens’ on policy

Policies affecting human capital formation during Youth transitions:

• Economy wide policies and institutions:

• macro stability,• investment climate, • governance,• labor market regulations

• Education and Training• Health services • Welfare & family services • Infrastructure

Youth ‘Lenses’

“Youth friendly”policies

Page 8: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

3 types of questions asked of each transition: a ‘youth lens’ on policy

Opportunities

Capability Second-chances

Policies affecting human capital formation during Youth transitions:

-- Economy widepolicies and insts: macro stability,invest. climate, governance, labor market regulations-- Education-- Training-- Health services -- Welfare & familyservices -- Infrastructure

Youth ‘Lenses’

“Youth friendly”policies

Page 9: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

9

Opportunities: a good education

Percent of young women, 15-24, who can read a simple sentence or know condoms can prevent HIV/AIDS after six years of primary school

Inadequate preparation for adolescence improve quality of basic education

Relevance of education for jobs curriculum reform, flexibility in school systems

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Ghana Zambia Ghana Zambia

Literacy Condom Knowledge

Page 10: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

10

Opportunities: health services

alternatives to early marriage and childbearing: schooling and work

proper nutrition access to health services:

reproductive health technology and servicesantenatal and obstetric care child health services

involving young men in SRH

Page 11: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Applying the framework: Opportunity Opportunity: Countries HAVE invested

in access to human capital; lens focus on education quality and relevance to labor market

Capability Second-chances

Page 12: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

3 types of questions asked of each transition: a ‘youth lens’ on policy

Opportunities Capability Second-chances

Policies affecting human capital formation during Youth transitions:

-- Economy widepolicies and insts: macro stability,invest. climate, governance, labor market regulations-- Education-- Training-- Health services -- Welfare & familyservices -- Infrastructure

Youth ‘Lenses’

“Youth friendly”policies

Page 13: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Capable decision-making: % of youth who think they have the most influence on human capital decisions

Page 14: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Capabilities: information

Half of 2,000 Kenyan adolescents chosen from KLPS randomly selected for VET voucher

Half of these receive information intervention targeted to females: -- avg returns from

KLPS -- encouraged to attend

male-dominated trades

Initial results: Large effect on

demand for male trades

Will probably affect earnings since avg earnings on tailoring and computers which some girls enter are high.

14

Source: DHS

Source: DHS

Page 15: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Relieving the information constraint

Page 16: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

…Incentives also matter. Positive ones, like

conditional cash transfers: Mexico’s Oportunidades:

• .2 more years of schooling at 13-15• reduced child morbidity and mortality

Bangladesh’s Female Secondary Stipend Program

Cambodia’s secondary scholarship program for girls

involve youth in program design esp those to change attitudes

Page 17: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

…Or negative ones like taxes

Impact of a one percent price increase

-2

-1.5

-1

-0.5

0

Perc

en

t ch

an

ge

smoking smoking alcohol binge marijuana use drinking use

China U.S. High school students

Page 18: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Outline Motivation Structure/Framework of the Report Applying Framework: Examples

Opportunity: Capability: Policy targets Govts and now

Parents; lens improve the capacity of youth to decide among opportunities

Second-chances:

Page 19: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

3 types of questions asked of each transition: a ‘youth lens’ on policy

Opportunities CapabilitySecond-Chances

Policies affecting human capital formation during Youth transitions:

-- Economy widepolicies and insts: macro stability,invest. climate, governance, labor market regulations-- Education-- Training-- Health services -- Welfare & familyservices -- Infrastructure

Youth ‘Lenses’

“Youth friendly”policies

Page 20: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Second-chances: Recovering from poor outcomes

High costs of not giving young people another chance to recover:

Effects are long-lasting Later recovery as adults is more costly May inhibit investment by others (e.g., high

HIV/AIDS prevalence leads to lower investment)

Examples:

Page 21: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Examples of second-chance programs for RHA

Training for dropouts to re-enter mainstream educ

Child-care services in schools for students Family planning and maternal services for

youth

Page 22: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Policy Framework

Opportunity Capability Second-chances: Prevention; lens

Help young people recover from poor outcomes

Page 23: Reproductive Health of Adolescent Girls: Perspectives from WDR07 Emmanuel Jimenez December 1, 2009

Moving forward in Countries

Coordination: youth outcomes require improved multi-sector efforts

Voice: the constituency of youth is weak (which is why for this Report, we had extensive consultation)

Evaluation: many youth-specific initiatives are still new; impact must be studied

Providing school uniforms not only increased enrollment in Kenya – it lowered teenage pregnancy