Sustainable Livelihood Opportunities in a YOUTH Post-Conflict Setting EMPLOYMENT IN SIERRA LEONE 47609 Pia Peeters Wendy Cunningham Gayatri Acharya Arvil Van Adams YOUTH EMPLOYMENT IN SIERRA LEONE YOUTH EMPLOYMENT IN SIERRA LEONE Sustainable Livelihood Opportunities in a Post-Conflict Setting Pia Peeters Wendy Cunningham Gayatri Acharya Arvil Van Adams © 2009The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/TheWorld Bank 1818 H Street, NW Washington, DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000 Internet: www.worldbank.org E-mail: feedback@worldbank.org All rights reserved 1 2 3 4 5 12 11 10 09 This volume is a product of the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank.The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this volume do not necessarily reflect the views of the Executive Directors ofTheWorld Bank or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work.The boundaries,colors,denominations,and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgement on the part ofTheWorld Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. Rights and Permissions The material in this publication is copyrighted. Copying and/or transmitting portions or all of this work without permission may be a violation of applicable law.The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank encourages dissemination of its work and will normally grant permission to reproduce portions of the work promptly. For permission to photocopy or reprint any part of this work,please send a request with com- plete information to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, USA; telephone: 978-750-8400; fax: 978-750-4470; Internet: www.copyright.com. All other queries on rights and licenses, including subsidiary rights, should be addressed to the Office of the Publisher,TheWorld Bank, 1818 H Street NW,Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2422; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. ISBN: 978-0-8213-7822-9 eISBN: 978-0-8213-7908-0 DOI: 10.1596/978-0-8213-7822-9 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Youth employment in Sierra Leone :sustainable livelihood opportunities in a post-conflict setting / Pia Peeters ...[et al.]. p. cm ISBN 978-0-8213-7822-9 -- ISBN: 978-0-8213-7908-0 (electronic) 1.Youth--Employment--Sierra Leone. 2. Labor supply--Sierra Leone. 3. Occupational training--Sierra Leone. I. Peeters, Pia. HD6276.S48Y68 2009 331.3'4709664--dc22 2009002196 Cover image: Amadu Tarawallie, an artist in Freetown, Sierra Leone. The World Bank and Enhancing Interaction and Interface between Civil Society and the State to Improve Poor People's Lives (ENCISS) organized a competition in Sierra Leone among youth to express through art what youth and employment in Sierra Leone meant for them.Amadu's artwork was chosen as a result for the front cover of this book.Amadu states,"Engagement, even without immediate remunera- tion, is a prelude to gainful youth employment in Sierra Leone.Youthfulness means usefulness." Cover design: Naylor Design. Contents Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xiii 1 Introduction and Summary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Objectives and Organization of the Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Data and Methodology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Socioeconomic Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Main Findings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 2 Young People in Sierra Leone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Defining Young People in Sierra Leone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 Social Constructs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 Health . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 Family Formation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Citizenship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22 Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24 Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24 3 TheTransition from School toWork . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Time Use amongYoung People in Sierra Leone . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28 Benchmarking Sierra Leone to the Region . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50 Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51 Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54 v vi Contents 4 Labor Market Demand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 The Employers Survey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58 The Business Environment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58 Profile of Business and Farm Owners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62 Employers' Labor Demand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64 Low Skill Levels and the Dearth ofTraining . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69 Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75 Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76 5 International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 Forces Shaping the Employment of Young People . . . . . . . . . . . . .79 Lessons from theYouth Employment Inventory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81 Lessons from Sierra Leone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91 Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .101 Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .102 6 Main Findings and Recommendations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Main Findings and Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .105 Recommendations:A Strategy for Strengthening Employment among Young People . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .111 Moving to Action: Developing an Efficient Investment Strategy to Promote Sustainable Employment for Young People . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .120 Note . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .122 Appendix A TheTransition from School toWork . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 A. 1 Youth Employment Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 A. 2 Regression Estimates of Labor Force Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 Appendix B Labor Market Demand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 B. 1 Methodology of the Employers Survey. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 B. 2 Regression Estimates. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138 Contents vii B. 3 Constraints to Daily Business Operation and Growth, as Reported by Employers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144 Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146 Appendix C International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147 Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167 Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173 Boxes 2.1 The DualTransition of Young People in Conflict and Postconflict Settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 2.2 The Roots of the Current Social Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 3.1 Migrants and the Labor Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 5.1 Creating Jobs and Building Infrastructure in Senegal . . . . . . . . . . .86 5.2 Setting Goals forTraining Future Entrepreneurs . . . . . . . . . . . . . .87 5.3 ImprovingTraditional ApprenticeshipTraining in Kenya through Competition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .90 5.4 Uganda's Program for the Promotion of Children andYouth . . . . .92 Figures 2.1 Urban Population, by Age Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 2.2 Rural Population, by Age Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 2.3 Share of PopulationThat Is in School and NotWorking, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 2.4 Share of Female Population with at Least One Child, by Age . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 2.5 Share of PopulationThat Is Married, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 2.6 Share of PopulationThat Heads a Household, by Age and Gender . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22 3.1 Time Use in Sierra Leone, by Age and Gender . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28 3.2 Time Use in Sierra Leone, by Age and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 3.3 Activities of Jobless in Sierra Leone,Ages 15­35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31 viii Contents 3.4 Unemployment Rates in Sierra Leone, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33 3.5 Time Spent by Unemployed Searching for a Job, by Age . . . . . . . . .35 3.6 Labor Force Participation, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 3.7 Percentage of WorkersWho Are Unpaid Employees, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38 3.8 Percentage of WorkersWho Are Self-Employed, by Gender, Urban-Rural Location, and Age . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39 3.9 Percentage of WorkersWho EarnWages, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41 3.10 Type of Work Sought by the Unemployed, by Age . . . . . . . . . . . . .42 3.11 Percentage of Workers in the Formal Sector, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42 3.12 Distribution of the Labor Force, by Industry, Age, and Gender . . . .43 3.13 Distribution of the Labor Force by Industry, Age, and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44 3.14 Share of Labor ForceWorking PartTime, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46 3.15 Distribution of (Log) AnnualWages by Age Group . . . . . . . . . . . . .48 3.16 Distribution of (Log) AnnualWages, by Age Group and Urban-Rural Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49 3.17 Additional Income Earned Attributable to Additional Education Completed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50 3.18 Earnings, by Age and Education Levels in Urban Areas . . . . . . . . . .51 5.1 Structure of Sierra Leone's Education System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94 Tables 1.1 Selected Social Indicators for Sierra Leone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 3.1 Profile of the Jobless, by Age and Gender . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32 3.2 What DidYou Do in the Past Seven Days to FindWork? . . . . . . . . .36 3.3 Share of Working Labor ForceThatWould Like to Work Longer Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47 3.4 Time Use Patterns among People 15­24 in Selected Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52 4.1 Businesses and Farms Included in the Survey Sample . . . . . . . . . . .58 4.2 Top Constraints to Daily Operations and Growth, byType of Firm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59 4.3 Top Constraints to Daily Operations and Growth, by Size of Farm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61 Contents ix 4.4 Sources of Start-Up Capital and Use of Loans, by Size of Business or Farm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62 4.5 Profile of Business and Farm Owners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63 4.6 Primary Reasons for Starting One's Own Enterprise . . . . . . . . . . .64 4.7 Profile of Employees of Businesses and Farms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65 4.8 Avenues for Hiring New Employees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .68 4.9 Demand for Labor by Agricultural Producers during Peak Seasons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69 4.10 Constraints to Hiring Agricultural Labor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70 4.11 Skill Levels of Current Employees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71 4.12 Training Needs and Benefits of Training, as Perceived by Employers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72 4.13 Employers' Explanations of Why They Do Not OfferTraining and How Employee Skills Could Best Be Improved . . . . . . . . . . . .74 5.1 Impacts and Outcomes of Various Types of Employment Programs forYoung People . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83 A1.1 Time Use, by Demographic Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .123 A1.2 Number of Months UnemployedWorkers Spend Searching forWork, by Age . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .124 A1.3 Share of the Labor ForceWorking FullTime, by Demographic Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .124 A1.4 Share of Working Labor Force That Would Like to Work More Hours, by Demographic Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125 A1.5 Type of Employment, by Demographic Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125 A1.6 Share of Labor Force Population in Formal Employment, by Demographic Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125 A1.7 Sector of Employment, by Demographic Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . .126 A2.1 Probability of Being Unemployed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .127 A2.2 Probability of Being in the Labor Force . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .128 A2.3 Probability of Holding a Formal Sector Job . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .129 A2.4 Probability of Holding a Paying Job . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .130 A2.5 Probability of Holding aWage-Paying Job . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .130 A2.6 Probability of Being Employed in the Agricultural Sector . . . . . . .131 A2.7 Probability of Being Employed in the Service Sector . . . . . . . . . .132 A2.8 Probability of Being Employed in theTrade Sector . . . . . . . . . . . .133 B1.1 Population and Sample Size, Sampling Fraction, and SamplingWeight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .137 B2.1 Employer Preferences for Hiring OlderWorkers . . . . . . . . . . . . . .138 B2.2 Probability of Hiring a New Employee in the PastYear . . . . . . . . .139 B2.3 Probability of Providing FormalTraining to Employees . . . . . . . . .140 B2.4 Probability of Willingness to Pay forTraining Employees . . . . . . .141 x Contents B2.5 Probability of Providing FormalTraining to Farm Employees . . . .142 B2.6 Probability of Willingness to Pay forTraining Farm Employees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143 B3.1 Constraints to Daily Business Operation and Growth, as Reported by Employers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .144 B3.2 Constraints to Daily Business Operation and Growth, as Reported by Farm Owners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .145 Acknowledgments T his report was written by Pia Peeters, Wendy Cunningham, Gayatri Acharya,andArvil VanAdams.Mohamed Gibril Sesay,Olga Susana Puerto, and Peter Holland prepared background papers. Juan Muñoz, David Zimmer, and Ramathan Ramaswamy provided support to the design, implemen- tation, and analysis of the employers survey. The study team consulted continuously with the government as well as multi- and bilateral donors.To get a handle on the perceptions held by young people and adults, the team held nationwide focus group discussions with them, in collabora- tion with Enhancing Interaction and Interface between Civil Society and the State to Improve Poor People's Lives (ENCISS).These focus group discussions were cofunded by the Department for International Development (DfID). The team wishes to thank the government of Sierra Leone, particularly the Minister of Youth and Sports at the time of the study,the Honorable Dennis Bright, for his inspiration and guidance throughout the study, and Anthony Koroma. Statistics Sierra Leone conducted an employers survey designed by the World Bank as input to this study. It also provided valuable statistics based on the Sierra Leone Housing and Population Census. Particular thanks go to Professor John Laurence Kamara (Statistician General),Philip S. Amara,Peter S.Bangura,Thekeka Moses Conteh, Sheick I. Koroma, Mohamed B. Moigua, John Pessima, Adama Simmons, MosesWilliams,AlimamyYalancy, and all the survey enumerators. Special thanks go to Jeannette Eno and Andrew Lavali (ENCISS); Andrew Greene and the staff and volunteers from Iearn; Sebastien Barraud and all of the Student Partnership Worldwide (SPW) volunteers in Bo; Abu Express; Sylvanus Joe Fannah (Executive Director),John Paul Ngebeh,and Kenyeh Barlay (National Commission for Social Action [NaCSA]); andTennysonWilliams (ActionAid). The team wishes to thank the donor community for its continuous support dur- ing the development of this study, particularly Dr. Victor Angelo (United Nations xi xii Acknowledgments Integrated Office in Sierra Leone [UNIOSIL]); Graham Chipande, Bengt Lgunggren,andWahab Shaw (United Nations Development Programme [UNDP]); Dr. Mustapha (United Nations Population Fund); Edmund Makiu (United Nations Children's Fund [UNICEF]); and Dr. Leopold Zekeng ( Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS [UNAIDS]). Special thanks also go to Fabio Germano and Dr. Salua Nour (German Agency for Technical Cooperation [GTZ]); Christine Sheckler and Eddie Benya (United States Agency for International Development [USAID]); Lisa Curtis, Jane Hobson, and Richard Erlebach (DfID); Grainne O'Neill (Goal Ireland); Kate Whiteside; and Charles Lahai.Very special thanks go to Mohamed Mansaray,whose excellent driving skills saved our lives on a trip to Koidu,to all the employers who gave their time to par- ticipate in the employers survey,and to all of the people who participated in focus group discussions throughout the country. At the World Bank, the team wishes to thank Ishac Diwan (Country Director), Mats Karlsson (Country Director), James Sackey (former Country Manager), Engilbert Gudmundsson (Country Manager),Mary Barton-Dock (Sector Manager), Karen Mcconnel Brooks (Sector Manager), Ian Bannon (Sector Manager), Douglas Addison, Gordon Betcherman,Yesmeana Butler, Maria Correia, Michael Diliberti, Philip English, Marcelo Fabre, Paul Francis, Estanislao Gacitua-Mario, Chris Humphrey, Salieu Jalloh, Alexandra Klopfer, Fatu Karim Turay, Mattias Lundberg, Rose Mungai,Sean Bradley,Richard Stern,QuentinWodon,Giuseppe Zampaglione, Yongmei Zhou,and peer reviewers Carine Clert,Jean Fares,and Linda McGinnis. This study was partially funded by the Trust Fund for Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development (TFESSD), a multidonor trust fund supported by Finland and Norway. Abbreviations AGETIP Agence d'Exécution desTravaux d'Intérêt Public contre le Sous-Emploi (PublicWorks and Employment Agency) CEC community education center CREPS Complementary Rapid Education for Primary Schools CYCI CommonwealthYouth Credit Initiative DCYP Disadvantaged Children andYouth Programme DDR disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration DfID Department for International Development (United Kingdom) ENCISS Enhancing Interaction and Interface between Civil Society and the State to Improve Poor People's Lives GDP gross domestic product GTZ Deutsche Gesellschaft fürTechniche Zusammenarbeit (German Agency forTechnical Cooperation) NGO nongovernmental organization OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development PRSP Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper SLES Sierra Leone Employers Survey SLIHS Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey SLPRSP Sierra Leone Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper TVET technical and vocational education and training UN United Nations UNAMSIL United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone xiii xiv Abbreviations UNDP United Nations Development Programme UNICEF United Nations Children's Fund UNIDO United Nations Industrial Development Organization UNIFEM United Nations Development Fund forWomen UNIOSL United Nations Integrated Office in Sierra Leone UNOWA United Nations Office forWest Africa USAID United States Agency for International Development WHO World Health Organization YEI Youth Employment Inventory YRTEP Youth ReintegrationTraining and Education for Peace Program Introduction and Summary 1 S ierra Leone is emerging from a period of postconflict reconstruction follow- ing a decade of civil war that began in 1991 and destroyed most of the coun- try's social,economic,and physical structure.The war led to the displacement of 2 million people (almost half the country's population), the death of more than 20,000 people,and immeasurable suffering.At the core of the conflict lay a class of marginalized young people,especially from rural areas,lacking education and access to livelihood opportunities. Because of their involvement in the conflict,and the impact it had on them,the situation of young people in Sierra Leone, especially those who are under- or unemployed,is a major concern for policy makers.According to the government, the fact that such a large number of people under 35 are inactive in the labor mar- ket could undermine development interventions and ultimately threaten the recently established stability. Many of these young people are illiterate, equipped with few employable skills, and lack work experience, in good part as a result of the conflict, which affected their formative years. The government of Sierra Leone considers the creation of job opportunities for the large and growing number of young people a top priority--and a prereq- uisite for maintaining peace and promoting pro-poor growth.Reflecting this pri- ority,the Sierra Leone Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (SLPRSP) articulates its vision in terms of three complementary pillars: good governance, security, and peace; propoor sustainable economic growth for food security and job creation; and human capital development.The second pillar encompasses food security for the poor and vulnerable and expansion of job opportunities for the under- and unemployed, especially young people in urban and rural areas in both the formal and informal sectors.The SLPRSP II, which the government elected in 2007 is now preparing,continues to support the three complementary pillars and to main- tain the focus on the challenges identified in the Country Assistance Strategy (World Bank 2008a). 1 2 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone The special needs of young people are of particular concern to the government, for both social and political reasons.On the social development side,people 15­35 are at a disadvantage relative to today's children or adults, because they grew up during a war,which affected both their human capital development and their tran- sition into adulthood.Rather than spending childhood in school,protected by par- ents and the community and learning the skills needed to become productive adults,these young people experienced migration,sporadic school attendance,and absent parents or families.Transitioning from childhood to adulthood (heading a household, starting a family of one's own, securing employment to provide for dependents) is a difficult process under the best of circumstances; because of the conflict,it is particularly difficult for many young people in Sierra Leone.Holding a job and being able to provide for oneself and one's potential family are key ele- ments of reaching adulthood.Lack of access to income,delays in family formation, and lack of recognition by society can lead to frustration,hopelessness,and a greater potential for violence and crime. Political motivations for addressing the needs of young people are also impor- tant.Young people are prone to hold governments responsible for the problems they face making the transition to adulthood.This phenomenon is not limited to Sierra Leone: youth movements have been key in forcing government responses across the world. In the volatile environment of recovery from conflict it can be particularly significant.For all of these reasons,it is wise for the government,soci- ety,and the international community to understand the situation that young peo- ple are facing in Sierra Leone and to identify policies for better supporting them. Objectives and Organization of the Study This study aims to help readers understand the main issues and challenges facing young people in Sierra Leone with respect to the labor market. The specific objectives of the study are fivefold:to understand the characteristics of young peo- ple in Sierra Leone, to understand the relation between young people and the labor market in Sierra Leone,to analyze the skill needs of the country's labor mar- ket,to analyze skill development programs to enhance the employability of young people, and to identify policy and program recommendations. The study pays special attention to understanding the different realities of labor supply and demand faced by men and women,urban versus rural residents,skilled versus unskilled workers,and workers in the formal versus informal sectors.Young people are compared with adults in the labor market to understand if the two groups face different or similar constraints and opportunities and to help identify youth-specific programs and policies versus programs and policies addressing the needs of both young people and adults in the labor market. Employment and solutions to unemployment need to be considered in light of Sierra Leone's economic situation and the government's budget constraints.In Sierra Leone's challenging economic and human development context,policy makers are faced with many competing demands and limited resources. Given this reality, a Introduction and Summary 3 two-track approach is needed to address employment of young people.In the short and medium term,resources are needed to support their employability.In the longer term,investments and policy changes that could contribute to economic growth are required,combined with efforts to prepare today's children for more productive jobs in the growth sectors of the economy through education and training. This study focuses on short- and medium-term solutions. It informs the gov- ernment about the type of programs and policies that could improve the employa- bility of young people, paying special attention to areas in which productivity can be rapidly improved. The report consists of six chapters. Chapter 2 profiles young people in Sierra Leone.Chapter 3 examines young people in the labor market,with a focus on the labor supply side of the equation (that is,the skills young people bring to the labor market). Chapter 4 turns to employers (the demand side of the labor market) to better understand why they do or do not employ young people.Chapter 5 reviews skill development programs to enhance employability of young people in Sierra Leone and other countries and presents policy options for improving worker skills (supply side) and employer interest (demand side). Chapter 6 summarizes the les- sons from the analysis and concludes with policy and program recommendations. Data and Methodology This study is based on the following main data sources:the Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey 2003 and the Statistics Sierra Leone Census 2004; the Sierra Leone Employers Survey,developed as part of this study and implemented in coor- dination with Statistics Sierra Leone; and theYouth Employment Inventory pre- pared by theWorld Bank in 2006. The study methodology included frequent consultations and coordination with the government, the donor community, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) to ensure the relevance of the study for the Sierra Leonean context and to build government and donor support for policy and program recommendations. Consultations included the following: · A launching workshop at the beginning of the study with government and NGO representatives to identify their priorities for the issues to be addressed by the study1 · A launching presentation and discussion of the proposed study to the donor com- munity, hosted by the United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL), which included participation of all UN agencies and most of the key bilateral donors working in Sierra Leone, including the German Agency for Technical Cooperation (GTZ), the United Kingdom's Department for International Development (DfID), and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) · Continuous discussions throughout the preparation of the study with both the government and multi- and bilateral donors 4 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone · Continuous consultations with NGOs, youth umbrella organizations, and young people and adults themselves.These consultations included nationwide focus group discussions with young people and adults on employment, local governance,poverty,and conflict,undertaken in collaboration with Enhancing Interaction and Interface between Civil Society and the State to Improve Poor People's Lives (ENCISS).2 The results of these discussions,summarized in Voices and Views: Youth and Employment in Sierra Leone (World Bank and ENCISS 2007), were used as an input into the World Development Report 2007: Development and the Next Generation (World Bank 2006c) · A presentation of the main findings and recommendations to the Peace- Building Commission for Sierra Leone in NewYork · A two-day workshop with the government and the donor community to discuss and validate the main findings,especially the recommendations of the report Socioeconomic Context Sierra Leone has a very young population. Of the country's 4.9 million people, 34 percent of whom live in urban areas, 42 percent are under 15 and about 34 percent are 15­35 (the definition of youth in Sierra Leone) (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c). Poverty rates in Sierra Leone are among the highest the world, with about 70 percent of its people living below the poverty line.The country ranked last out of 177 countries in the 2007/2008 UNDP Human Development Index. Annual per capita income of $805 (purchasing power parity) is among the lowest in the world (table 1.1). Life expectancy is only 47.5 years for men and 49.4 years for women (Statistics Sierra Leone 2006b)--about three years less than the aver- age for Africa and 18 years less than the world average (World Bank 2007a). Literacy rates are low, at 49 percent for males and 29 percent for females (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c). Men average less than four years of education and women less than two years.While access to primary school increased significantly during the past several years, raising net primary enrollment rates to 75 percent, access to junior- and senior-secondary schools remains very limited (World Bank 2007a).The quality of education is low and repetition rates very high, with about half of sixth graders older than 13. The overall health situation remains poor,with infant,child,and maternal mor- tality rates among the highest in the world (table 1.1).The mean age of first sexual experience is 16, teenage pregnancy levels are 178 per 1,000, and 24 percent of people 20­24 and 28 percent of people 25­29 have sexually transmitted diseases. The prevalence of HIV is 1.5 percent nationally, with female prevalence peaking at 20­24 and male prevalence peaking at 35­39 (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005a). While Sierra Leone's postconflict economic performance has been robust, the recovery remains fragile. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) expanded continuously between 2000 and 2007, growing 10.7 percent in 2003, 9.6 percent in 2004, 7.5 percent in 2005 (Statistics Sierra Leone 2007),and an estimated 6.8 percent in 2007 Introduction and Summary 5 Table 1.1 Selected Social Indicators for Sierra Leone Indicator Value GDP per capita, 2005 (purchasing power parity, current $)a 805 Literacy rate, 2004 (percent)b Total 39 Male 49 Female 29 Net enrollment rate, 2003­04 (percent)c Primary 75 Junior-secondary 13 Senior-secondary 7 Life expectancy at birth, 2004 (years)a Total 48.4 Male 47.5 Female 49.4 Mortality Maternal mortality ratio 2000 (per 100,000 live births)a 2,000 Infant mortality rate 2004 (per 1,000 live births)b 115 Under-five mortality rate 2004 (per 1,000 live births)b 194 a.World Bank 2006d. b. Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c. c.World Bank 2007a. (World Bank 2008a).Much of the postconflict growth,however,was a bounce-back effect as a result of recovery in agriculture and mining,large-scale resettlement and reconstruction activities,and the peacekeeping operation and other donor-funded programs (World Bank 2006b).Continuing constraints to improved economic per- formance include limited private investment; weak local purchasing power; still dilapidated infrastructure (although the government has invested significantly to improve the country's infrastructure, especially access to main roads and electric- ity); and weak governance, as demonstrated by weak institutional capacity, a frag- ile judicial system, and corruption (World Bank 2005c, 2008a).This challenging economic and human development situation is not merely a postconflict phe- nomenon, as many of these challenges existed during the 1980s and contributed to the outbreak of the conflict. Within this complex and challenging context,identifying strategies to prepare this generation of young people to participate fully in the economy and con- tribute to economic growth is a priority for public policy. Other nations have faced the youth employment challenge, although few have done so under such daunting circumstances. 6 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Main Findings According to the national definition of Sierra Leone,young people (people 15­35) represent 34 percent of the population (Statistics Sierra Leone 2004).For the pur- poses of this report,these people are divided into three groups:adolescents (15­19), youth (20­24), and young adults (25­35). Today's young people are transitioning from excombatants and victims of civil conflict to productive civilians in a peaceful society.While the social infrastructure in postconflict Sierra Leone is changing,intergenerational tensions remain.In many rural areas,elders still hold power over land and labor;throughout the country peo- ple over 35 appear to have more promising opportunities than younger people. One of the key transitions from childhood to adulthood is leaving school and becoming a full­time worker (or homemaker).Many social scientists consider the start toward working life the most important marker of independence. In Sierra Leone all young men and women pass through certain stages in the school-to- work transition, but these paths differ by demographic group. The percentage of people inactive in the labor market (those not in school,not working,and not looking for employment) is high,especially among urban youth. By 20­24 one in three urban youth and one in six rural youth is inactive in the labor market.Inactivity rates for male and female youth are similar.However,while inactivity rates for female youth are similar to adult rates, those for male youth are almost twice as high as those for male adults. Just 4 percent of all young people in Sierra Leone are unemployed,but this fig- ure hides significant difference across demographic groups.Urban residents 15­24 are 25 times as likely to be unemployed than their rural counterparts.Among 15- to 19-year olds, unemployment rates are 17.4 percent in urban areas and just 0.7 percent in rural areas.The gap decreases with age,but it remains substantial.Young men are almost twice as likely to be unemployed as young women. Average unemployment rates fail to capture discouraged workers,people who are inactive in the labor market,the underemployed,and people with very low-paying, poor-quality jobs.Nearly 10 percent of Sierra Leoneans 20­24--but just 3 percent of adults who are inactive in the labor market--are discouraged workers, reflecting the much higher level of hopelessness among youth. As in other Sub-SaharanAfrican countries, many people are too poor to be unemployed and must take up work regardless of its quality or level of remuneration.The levels of unpaid labor are very high in Sierra Leone,especially in rural areas where subsistence farming is the norm. Underemployment is significant in Sierra Leone, where one in five youth 20­24 is working fewer hours than he or she would like (the figure for adults is one in six). As with adults, employment of young people is concentrated in agricultural activities, in the informal sector, and among the self-employed. Agricultural activities represent 70 percent of employment,with similar levels for young peo- ple and adults.The service sector is underpopulated by young people, while the retail sector employs them heavily.Formal sector employment increases with age, but it remains very low across the life cycle (at just 9 percent of the working-age Introduction and Summary 7 population). Self-employment represents more than half of employment, with many of the self-employed working for themselves because of lack of other opportunities. Young people tend to have less promising employment opportunities than adults in Sierra Leone: · Less than half of young workers receive payment for their labor,compared with two-thirds of adults 35 and older, even though young people tend to be better educated than adults. · Young people have far fewer opportunities for salaried employment than adults. · Formal employment opportunities are significantly lower for young people than they are for adults. · Public sector employment opportunities are mainly for adults. · The desire to change jobs is highest among 25- to 35-year-olds. In the short term, the agricultural and agrobusiness sector and public sector works hold the greatest potential to absorb a large number of unskilled young workers.Food crop production will be the main driver of agricultural growth and poverty reduction. In the medium to longer term, promotion of export products, such as cocoa and gari,offers the greatest potential for major increases in employ- ment opportunities and incomes in rural areas.Low-skilled labor could be partially absorbed through the ongoing and planned high levels of investment in infra- structure and other public sector works, such as waste management. Developing innovative mechanisms for road maintenance and other public services through private small and medium-size enterprises also holds the potential to absorb both unskilled and skilled young workers. Other promising sectors for employment include tourism and mining. Business and farm owners tend to be adult men with higher levels of education than the general population.Younger entrepreneurs (defined as entrepreneurs 20­35) represent only one-quarter of business owners, with fewer young owners in larger firms than in smaller firms. Male ownership is the norm, increasingly so with business size; it is also more prevalent in formal than in informal businesses. Only 9 percent of farm owners are younger than 35. In focus group discussions, many young people cite inadequate access to land and credit as major constraints in rural areas, which may partly explain the observed low proportion of younger farm owners. The survey of employers conducted for this study finds that limited job oppor- tunities for young people are linked more closely to the general lack of economic opportunities for business operation and development than to age-related factors. Some features of the labor market in Sierra Leone do disadvantage young people, however. Many employers, for example, prefer not to hire people 18­24, espe- cially women.They tend to hire employees based on strong social connections, which young people typically lack. Focus group discussions reveal that young people perceive that only people who are well connected (older people and 8 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone relatives of contractors, government officials, and NGO staff) can obtain paid employment and that connections are more important than merit. Employers perceive the skill level of their employees as low and problematic. The skill shortage is more serious for agricultural businesses,larger businesses,and formal enterprises.As a result,demand for training of employers is high.However, lack of resources prevents employers from providing training. Almost half of all businesses and two-thirds of agricultural producers did not provide formal train- ing to their employees because of financial constraints. Business employers perceive on-the-job experience as the best means to improve the skills of employees.In contrast,agricultural producers would prefer to rely more on formal training. For both skilled and unskilled workers, business employers perceive on-the-job experience as the best method to improve the skill level of their employees.For unskilled workers,apprenticeships are another favored means, possibly because of low or nonexistent costs for the employer. International experience suggests that training and skill development programs for young people can be successful when they involve the private sector in iden- tifying the skills required by the market and providing practical, relevant work experience. Demand-driven models create more promising training courses that equip participants with the skills required by the private sector.On-the-job train- ing, including apprenticeship, is one of the most effective and cost-efficient approaches for strengthening skills. Traditional technical and vocational education and training (TVET) programs are often not effective in promoting employment of young people. In develop- ing countries, a major issue with TVET is the often-missing link with market needs, resulting in saturation of the labor market with popular skills, such as car- pentry, soap making, tailoring, and so on. As primary school enrollment rates increase, demand for secondary education is expected to increase. Policy makers will need to determine the level of attention and public resources to allocate to general education and how much to TVET, especially given the much higher unit cost of TVET. Nonformal education programs that bring school dropouts up to an academic level equivalent to that missed in formal schooling could be especially important in a country in which young people missed educational opportunities because of conflict. Combining equivalency programs with other services as part of a com- prehensive program can yield positive benefit-cost ratios.These comprehensive second-chance programs work, but their high cost highlights the importance of providing a good education the first time around. Investments in public works are a sound option for creating employment opportunities for young people, particularly in the short term.These programs should also provide skill development training. While improving chances for young entrepreneurs holds promise for job creation, international evidence indicates that not everyone is suited to self-employment. Partly for this reason,failure rates among programs that try to spur self-employment and entrepreneurship tend to be high. In addition to a certain skill level, one also Introduction and Summary 9 needs to be business savvy, which is a difficult skill to acquire. Careful targeting and screening for these programs is important to success and cost-effectiveness. Recommendations Policy and programming areas to improve sustainable livelihood opportunities of young people in Sierra Leone can be classified into four categories: · Priority short-term interventions that build on international experiences of cost-effective programs with a positive impact or current opportunities in Sierra Leone.These interventions have the greatest potential impact on the sustainable employment opportunities of young people and would require relatively lim- ited resources. · Risky and costly short-term investments that are nevertheless needed in Sierra Leone.These types of interventions need to be implemented on a pilot basis and carefully monitored and evaluated before being scaled up. · Long-term interventions to improve the employment opportunities of the young people of the future. · Medium- to long-term interventions to get the environment right to benefit the young people of today and tomorrow. Interventions of the first kind include strengthening the skills of formal and informal private sector employers and their employees; implementing specific interventions in agriculture;developing work experience of young people through public work schemes; and strengthening the skills profile of out of school young people.Interventions of the second kind include increasing access to financing for private sector employers and farmers and supporting self-employment and entre- preneurship for young people. Interventions of the third kind include increasing access to quality primary and secondary education, including TVET, as well as developing specialized labor for sectors in need of highly-skilled labor.Interventions of the fourth kind include improving access to land for young people as well as rethinking the definition of young people in Sierra Leone. Based on a review of international experience and this review of the Sierra Leone context, this report concludes that the effectiveness of employment pro- grams for young people will be limited unless policy makers address a number of weaknesses: · The implementation capacity of both the government and many of the NGOs and private sector providers of youth employment programs is insufficiently strong. · Programs for young people are often poorly designed, supply-driven, short- term interventions with no follow up. · Most programs focus on short-term employment creation instead of sustain- able employment. 10 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone · Programs for young people focus disproportionately on training, with weak program development and limited links to labor market demand. · Programs have invested heavily in entrepreneurship, with limited success. · Significant investment inTVET programs has not had the hoped-for impacts. Traditional apprenticeships may offer more promising opportunities. Sierra Leone has made significant efforts to promote the development of its young people. It has a youth policy that identifies job creation and skills training as key strategic areas for intervention,as well as a NationalAction Plan for youth. While the economic and human development situation the country faces will continue to limit work opportunities for all Sierra Leoneans in the near future, a number of focused interventions can provide opportunities for young people. If properly designed and thoughtfully implemented, the interventions proposed in this report can improve the employment prospects of the country's young people.The sustained recovery of the economy,an improved investment climate, and increased development of the private sector are needed to improve labor market opportunities for both young people and adults, however, as even the best-designed and implemented polices and programs are likely to fail in a stag- nant economy. Notes 1. The workshop was organized in 2005. Participating government representatives included the Hon. Solomon Brewea,Vice President of Sierra Leone; the Hon. Dennis Bright, Minister of Youth and Sports; the Hon. Dr. C. A. Jalloh, Minister of Marine Resources; the Hon. Dr. Kedi Sesay, Minister of Trade and Industry; the Hon. Dr. P.A. Harding, Minister of Transport and Communications; the Hon. Alpha O. Timbo, Minister of Labor, Industrial Relations and Social Security; the Hon. Sidikie Brima, Minister of Local Government and Community Development;the Hon.OkereAdams, Minister of Tourism and Culture;and Prof.H.B.S.Kandeh,Statistician General,Sierra Leone.Also in attendance were representatives from the Ministry of Development and Economic Planning;the Ministry ofAgriculture,Forestry and Policy;and the National Commission for Social Action. 2. These consultations were cofunded by the Department for International Development (DfID).The objectives of the focus group discussions were to understand attitudes,per- ceptions, and expectations regarding employment and employability for and of young people and to identify social and institutional issues affecting their access to employ- ment. A total of 714 people participated in 36 focus group discussions, in all four regions and 12 districts of the country, covering both urban and rural communities (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). Young People in Sierra Leone 2 T he 2007 World Development Report identifies "youth" as the transitional phase from childhood to adulthood during which young people gradually come to be recognized--and to recognize themselves--as adults through a process of intense physiological, psychological, social, and economic change (World Bank 2006c).The report identifies five life transitions taking place during this period: learning as adolescents and young adults, starting a productive work- ing life, adopting a healthy (or unhealthy) lifestyle, forming families, and exercising active citizenship. The transitions for young people in Sierra Leone have been especially chal- lenging,because they have had to combine these five transitions with a sixth tran- sition: from excombatants or victims of civil conflict to productive civilians in a peaceful society (box 2.1).The report focuses mainly on the second transition, starting a productive working life.This chapter sets the stage by briefly defining young people in the Sierra Leonean context. It examines the influence of social constructs and discusses the other four transitions (education, health, family, and citizenship) in Sierra Leone. DefiningYoung People in Sierra Leone Youth is a social construct; its definition thus varies considerably. The United Nations World Program of Action for Youth identifies youth as the period between 15 and 24 (UN 2005).The World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF distinguish three categories of people 10­24:adolescents (15­19),youth (15­24), and young people (10­24).The 2007 World Development Report defines youth to include everyone between 12 and 24.The definition in Sierra Leone (15­35) is wider than it is in many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (Government of Sierra Leone 2003). 11 12 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Box 2.1 The Dual Transition of Young People in Conflict and Postconflict Settings In conflict and postconflict settings, young people face a dual transition.While the life stages preceding adulthood are complex and challenging during peacetime, the effects of conflict further complicate the process by breaking down social norms and cultural practices, exposing young people to violent societal leaders, disrupting educational systems and employment opportunities, delaying family formation, and preventing the exercise of citizenship. Particularly for young peo- ple, who often have few assets and little power, violence can promote a sense of identity based on the exertion of power.Young people in conflict and postconflict settings must thus navigate the complex transition from being a combatant or vic- tim to being a civilian and productive member of society as well as achieving adulthood (World Bank 2005f). In many countries, young people have been the main perpetrators of violence. As studies in Liberia and Sierra Leone have shown, at the core of conflicts was a class of marginalized people, especially young men, who were trapped in a perpet- ual state of "youth," unable to marry and make the transition to adulthood and achieve manliness (Richards, Bah, and James 2004; Richards 2005). Before the genocide in Rwanda, young people were largely trapped in lives of poverty, immobility, frustration, and humiliation (Correia and Bannon 2006). Surveys of young people in northern Uganda indicate complex incentives for participation in the Lord's Resistance Army. Estimates suggest that up to 66,000 people 13­30 have been abducted, of which about only one-fifth engaged in violence. Most became involved under extreme duress. Up to one-third were willing recruits, attracted by the camaraderie or lure of promotion (Annan and others 2005). In Nepal dalits and ethnic minorities have reported less discrimination as members of Maoist fighting forces or in areas under Maoist control than in society at large (Bennett and Bannon 2004). Education systems--which tend to reflect the skills, values, and social relations of dominant groups in society--are frequently a contributory factor to violence. In Kosovo, for example, access to education was explicitly based on ethnic iden- tity. Kosovar Albanians were forced to leave the Kosovo public schools in the early 1990s; the "parallel system" established in its place came to be seen as a symbol of the Kosovar Albanian struggle against Serb rule (World Bank 2005b). While men are more likely than women to participate in conflict, young women and girls are often the most victimized in conflict settings. Repressive attitudes toward and expectations of young women and girls are intensified by conflict and violence.They are vulnerable to rape and sexual violence.Women captured by militia groups may be distributed as war booty among fighters, as a means of ethnic cleansing; many male fighters believe that women's bodies are theirs by right (Save the Children 2005). Young women are also more vulnerable to violence and assault during flight or in refugee camps, where protection and the rule of law are weak or absent. Young People in Sierra Leone 13 This report follows the national definition of Sierra Leone and the following sub- groups:adolescents (15­19),youth (20­24),and young adults (25­35).The three age groups are considered throughout the analysis to better understand the constraints each group faces and to determine whether or not it makes sense to lump the three subgroups into a single category.When comparing Sierra Leone with other countries, the 15­24 age definition is used,so that cross-country comparisons can be made. Sierra Leone has a young population. According to the national definition, people 15­35 represent 34 percent of the population (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c).The 15­19 age group represents 11 percent,the 20­24 age group 8 percent, and the 25­35 age group 15 percent of the population. Young people are more urbanized than children or adults.Among the overall population, 63 percent live in rural areas, compared to 53 percent for 20­24 year olds and 58 percent for 25-29 year olds (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c).These urban youth and young adults are concentrated in the Freetown area.During the conflict, young people seemed to migrate more often than adults to the Freetown area in search of safer environments. Focus group discussions revealed that they continue to migrate to urban areas in search of more promising labor market opportunities, especially paid labor (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). A second factor influencing the higher concentration of young people in the Freetown area is that young people already in urban areas have a strong resolve to remain there (Leibbrandt and Mtalsheni 2004).Migrant young people,both volun- tary and forced,generally regard themselves as urbanized.In Dar es Salaam,Tanzania, for example, the government campaigned to repatriate urban migrants, most of whom were young men, to rural areas.The efforts failed, wasting scarce resources (Sommers 2003; Leibbrandt and Mtalsheni 2004). A third reason why young people in Sierra Leone migrate to urban areas is the social control of elders in rural areas (discussed below). Migration often leads to separation from their families and traditional ties, resulting in a breakdown of communal traditions and family bonds. Many young men in Sierra Leone are missing.While there are roughly equal numbers of men and women who are children, adolescents, and adults, a differ- ent pattern emerges for the 20­34 age group, only 45 percent of whom are men. A closer look at the data reveals that this gender imbalance in the population is primarily a rural phenomenon (figures 2.1 and 2.2).Among people 20­34 in rural areas, only 42 percent are men. The gender imbalance in rural areas is likely a result of two phenomena.First,while both males and females suffered during the conflict,young men seemed to have had a higher incidence of death.Second,men seemed to have migrated more during the civil conflict (although young women still outnumber young men in urban areas). Social Constructs This report does not address in detail the underlying social organization patterns of Sierra Leonean society.A brief overview of these patterns, especially in rural areas, is important, however, to understand the opportunities and constraints of 14 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone young people with respect to the labor market and to develop policy and pro- gram recommendations.1 The social context prevalent in rural Sierra Leone emerged during the late 19th century (box 2.2).Family lineage is the foundation of social organization.The main landowning families in villages are organized in patrilineages--that is, membership, land access,and property pass along the male line.Among village elites marriage has Figure 2.1 Urban Population, by Age Group 90+ 80­84 70­74 60­64 puo 50­54 gr e 40­44 ag 30­34 20­24 10­14 0­4 0 20,000 40,000 60,000 80,000 100,000 120,000 140,000 population female male Source: Authors' calculations based on the 2004 Population and Housing Census (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c). Figure 2.2 Rural Population, by Age Group 90+ 80­84 70­74 60­64 puo 50­54 gr e 40­44 ag 30­34 20­24 10­14 0­4 0 50,000 100,000 150,000 200,000 250,000 300,000 population female male Source: Authors' calculations based on the 2004 Population and Housing Census (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c). Young People in Sierra Leone 15 Box 2.2 The Roots of the Current Social Context The current social context in rural Sierra Leone emerged from circum- stances of extreme social flux in the late 19th century.The interior was relatively peaceful until about 1874, after which for a period of about 15 years it was thrown into chaos by "a succession of captains of freebooters whose constant plundering and slave raiding affected even the coast and the Colony [Freetown] borders, endangered British subjects trading up- country, and cut off trade" (Fenton 1948, cited in Richards, Bah, and James 2004, p. 2). In a situation of insecurity and social flux, precedence went to first-comers, provided they had the means to deal with the threat of war. A typical pattern was one in which a hunter established a base for his area of operations, to be joined later by kinsmen and their dependents, who established a successful farming community."War boys" (professional warriors) were hired for protection and "to make conquests"; a chiefdom was formed "of which the ruling family is that of the founder of the cen- tral town" (Fenton 1948, cited in Richards, Bah, and James 2004, p. 2).A Mende town of about 200 houses, for example, was composed of the rul- ing family (supplying the section chief and town headman), six other leading families linked by marriage alliance, and about "sixty houses of single families who have one or two houses each" inhabited by "a very few traders or craftsmen" and "farmers who are clearly late arrivals and strangers, [having] obtained land from original families within the last generation or two" (Fenton 1948, cited in Richards, Bah, and James 2004, p. 2).This pattern is broadly similar for all Sierra Leonean ethnic groups and language communities. These were the circumstances in which the British took administrative control of the interior in 1896, following the drafting of the Protectorate Ordinance.The system of governance was later termed "indirect rule" (that is, rule by chiefs through "native" institutions).The British system greatly strengthened the position of the chiefs by giving them the right to labor and other support in the Protectorate Native Law Ordinance of 1905.A two-class society was thus formed, made up of ruling families and others (small farmers,"strangers," and domestic slaves). Source: Richards, Bah, and James 2004. long been a matter of strategic alliance, in addition to serving procreative and domestic functions.Members of weak lineages try to align themselves with stronger lineages.Those who have migrated from their own chiefdoms--perhaps to find work or escape customary social controls--have less of a vested interest in a system that offers them few clear property rights and ties them to village patrons in subordinated 16 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone and deferential social relationships over the longer term.Those with the smallest stake of all are young people squeezed for labor by the marriage system and local custom of labor control by elders. Lack of family connections is still a major source of vul- nerability and poverty, especially in rural Sierra Leone. Land is at the heart of social organization.Access to and control over land is usually the defining source of capital for elites.Landowning families control access to land, often limiting possibilities for others to develop a more independent source of livelihood (Richards, Bah, and James 2004; Richards 2005). If young people decide to leave their chiefdom of birth, they lose rights to land, which are assigned only to members of a family lineage. Elders often control labor, especially that of young people from weaker family lineages in rural areas. Under customary law, villagers throughout Sierra Leone were and often still are liable for "community labor";2 chiefs are also permitted to accept"voluntary"labor of their subjects.There was (and is) a strong feeling among young people that elders make the law to suit their own purposes (Peters 2006). Richards, Bah, and James (2004) identify one of the causes of marginalization of rural young people as "agrarian involution," in regard to pressure not on land but on labor supply.As more powerful lineages send larger numbers of young people to cities for their education, pressure grows on the young people who remain to provide more and more of the domestic services (through early marriage for young women) and agricultural and other labor (through bride service and community labor for young men). Unable to progress by education or working on their own account and finding themselves increasingly exploited, young women and men from vulnerable groups have few routes of escape other than, for example, labor- ing for pittances in the diamond fields.Enrolling in war provided temporary release for some while entrapping many others (Richards, Bah, and James 2004). The crisis before the conflict resulted in collapsed expectations of the tradi- tional social support mechanism and hopelessness among young people in rural areas.The economic crisis of the 1980s caused the collapse of social services such as education and medical care,and the shrinking of economic opportunities.This collapse was particularly devastating for young people in rural areas (Peters 2006). A patrimonial system with elders exercising strong social controls over the younger generations can last only as long as young people believe that their turn will eventually come.The social,political,and economic marginalization of young people resulted in lack of opportunities,spreading a feeling of despair and of being exploited by the very elders who, in more prosperous times, would historically have been more willing to help young people with education or jobs in exchange for political loyalty.The crisis in expectations is perhaps as important as any actual deterioration in material conditions, as extreme poverty is no new feature in the lives of most young people in rural Sierra Leone (Richards, Bah, and James 2004; Richards 2005; Peters 2006). Although social patterns in postconflict Sierra Leone are changing,intergener- ational tensions remain.Studies since the conflict have shown that a kind of"youth emancipation" has taken place; elders cannot rely as much as in the past on their Young People in Sierra Leone 17 customary authority (Richards, Bah, and James 2004; Richards 2005).The war eroded the financial powers of elders over young people.Where poverty used to marginalize some young people,it is now more general and pervasive,limiting the traditional control of elders,who lack the resources to renew themselves as patrons. The postwar period saw a remarkable upsurge in self-organized social activism among young people, who established business cooperatives; groups aiming at the development of a chiefdom, section, or district; and occupational groups, such as bike-riders and tape-sellers associations. In the Kono district alone, one NGO study counted 141 groups with membership of more than 17,000 young people (Peters 2006). Institutional values have changed little, and elders from strong lineages (male and female) have stakes in reviving the old system in order to hold on to their power. Customs and regulations concerning relations between elders and young people are still deemed to have a morally binding force.Another aspect that does not appear to have changed is the weak position of "strangers," who do not have family to speak on their behalf (Peters 2006).Among these"strangers"are excom- batants who have not migrated back to their own communities, perhaps because of lack of opportunities in their home communities, their resistance to return home without some financial capital, or atrocities committed during the conflict. Land is still controlled mainly by male elders; young people's access to land varies by locality, often limiting their opportunities for sustainable livelihood development. In communities with abundant land, young people tend to have access to land if they are interested in developing it. In some communities, such as Bombali, the support of the paramount chief greatly facilitates access to land. Access to land is perceived to be easier for annual crop cultivation than for tree crops and easier for young men than for young women (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). In communities with pressure on land, adults are given preference for the most fertile land and the land closest to the communities. According to young people in some rural communities, elders' control over land enables them to dominate them and their labor. Some young people also mention that owners tend to demand higher rents or fees for their land after young people invest in the land and start reaping the benefits of that investment (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). Young people, especially men, continue to migrate to urban areas because of their low social capital in rural areas and their desire for paid labor.Richards argues that the dislike of rural youth is not focused on agriculture as such but on their vulnerability to exploitation by village elites and elders.Richards argues that young people's desire to leave rural areas is based largely on their wish to escape exploita- tion by village elites and elders rather than their desire not to work as farmers. Young people, especially young men, continue to leave rural areas because they cannot clearly calculate the returns on investment of their only asset (labor) as a result of the often continuing arbitrary use of custom by elders to"tax"labor.They migrate to urban areas or areas with mining opportunities in the hopes of finding 18 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone paid labor opportunities.Their continuous migration has resulted in labor supply bottlenecks in some rural areas and in large numbers of young people who are dis- placed from families and traditional ties, resulting in a breakdown of communal traditions and family bonds (chapter 4). Education Although school participation rates of children are low in Sierra Leone, the percentage of young people attending school is higher than the average for Sub-Saharan Africa,most likely as a result of the decade-long conflict.Among 12- year-olds in Sierra Leone,only 68 percent are in school,compared with more than 85 percent of all children in developing countries (World Bank 2006c).The pro- portion of people 15­24 who are still in school--34 percent according to the 2004 Census data and 42 percent according to the Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey (SLIHS)--is relatively high compared with other countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (figure 2.3).The percentage of young people in school in a cross-country study covering 13 Sub-Saharan African countries ranges from 11 percent in Burkina Faso to 42 percent in Kenya (World Bank 2007b).The relatively high lev- els of school attendance by young people can be partially explained by the catching- up effect by those who lost out on education opportunities during the conflict. Education levels for young people remain low. About 35 percent of people 15­24 and 63 percent of people 25­35 in Sierra Leone never attended school. Within both age groups, only 20 percent finished primary school. While liter- acy rates for young people are higher than for adults, they remain very low, at 53 percent for adolescents,40 percent for youth,and 29 percent for young adults (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c). Education levels of young women are significantly lower than for young men; education levels for children tend to be more gender equal.Young people surveyed in 2002 consistently ranked "lack of educational opportunities" as their greatest constraint (Women's Commission 2003). Excombatants participating in the Disarmament,Demobilization,and Reintegration (DDR) program also listed edu- cation opportunities as one of their top priorities.As noted later in the report,firm and farm owners perceive the skill level of their employees as low. The government has made significant efforts to improve access to education in recent years.In 2001 it introduced the Free Primary Education Policy.Under the 2004 Education Act, all children should complete basic education: six years of primary school and three years of junior-secondary school (World Bank 2007a).The govern- ment has maintained a focus over the last several years on expanding basic education access to the entire country, with particular attention to disadvantaged groups such as girls and residents of the northern and eastern regions at the primary and junior- secondary school levels.Access to education has increased significantly since the end of the conflict, with primary school enrollments doubling between 2001/02 and 2004/05. Enrollments in junior-secondary school and senior-secondary schools also increased significantly,although the government currently faces a bottleneck for Young People in Sierra Leone 19 Figure 2.3 Share of Population That Is in School and Not Working, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location 90 80 70 tionalu 60 50 pop of 40 centr 30 pe20 10 0 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 age total urban rural male female Source: Authors' calculations based on the 2004 Population and Household Census (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c). secondary-school entry as a result of increased graduation from primary school. In additional to an expansion in general education,student enrollments in technical and vocational education and training (TVET) also expanded,with more than 30,000 stu- dents enrolled in such programs. Despite these improvements,about 25­30 percent of primary school children in Sierra Leone--more than 240,000 children--are still out of school. Girls, children in rural areas, children from the poorest households, and children in the Northern region continue to be particularly disadvantaged.Access to senior-secondary school and higher education remains very limited, with gross enrollment rates at about 14 and 4 percent, respectively.These rates are lower than the averages for low- income countries in Africa. In addition to low levels of school enrollment, the quality of education is low and repetition rates very high. Currently, about half of sixth graders in primary school are older than 13. Health The overall health of the population, including sexual and reproductive health, remains poor. Infant, child, and maternal mortality rates are among the highest in the world.The mean age of first sex is 16, teenage pregnancy levels are 178 per 1,000, and sexually transmitted infection rates are high (24 percent among people 20­24 and 28 percent among people 25­29).The prevalence of HIV is 1.5 percent 20 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone nationally, with female prevalence peaking at 20­24 and male prevalence peaking at 35­39 (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005a).The low rates suggest that the main risk of HIV/AIDS in Sierra Leone is among high-risk groups, such as commercial sex workers, miners, truck drivers, the police, and the military (UNAIDS 2006). Recently, the government tightened the focus of HIV/AIDS programs on these groups, with an emphasis on behavior change and well-targeted treatment of HIV. Although HIV/AIDS rates are still relatively low, ingredients are likely in place for a rapid spread of the epidemic. Key factors found to facilitate the spread of the disease in other conflict and postconflict environments are present in Sierra Leone. They include a brutal and protracted civil conflict with increased levels of rape, sexual violence, and abuse; high unemployment and chronic poverty; high levels of commercial sex work and the informal exchange of sex for goods and services; massive population movement (internally and among refugee populations); and minimal public health infrastructure (Global Fund 2005; UNICEF 2005). However, new research from Uganda casts doubt on the widely held assumption that internally displaced people and refugees are more likely to be infected with HIV than people in more stable settings.A recent review of the HIV literature on displaced people in eight countries (including Uganda) also failed to find evidence that conflict increases HIV transmission (WHO 2006). Family Formation The entry into parenthood starts earlier for females.Teenage motherhood levels are high,with 17 percent of 16-year-olds and 47 percent of 19-year-old females moth- ers (figure 2.4).These levels are high compared with other Sub-Saharan African countries and other regions of the world.Almost 80 percent of 25-year-olds are Figure 2.4 Share of Female Population with at Least One Child, by Age 100 90 tionalu 80 70 60 pop 50 of 40 30 centr 20 pe 10 0 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 age Source: Authors' calculations based on the 2004 Population and Housing Census (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c). Young People in Sierra Leone 21 mothers in Sierra Leone, compared with nearly 60 percent of young women in developing countries overall (World Bank 2006c). Young men make the transition to fatherhood later, as elsewhere in the world. Males transition into family life as young adults and often have to wait years before achieving independence as a household head.About half of young men are mar- ried at 27, and 15 percent are still not married at 35. In contrast, more than half of young women are married at 19, and 71 percent are married at 24 (figure 2.5).As elsewhere in the region, young people transition earlier into family life in rural areas than urban areas. Young men's labor market outcomes are associated with the timing of tran- sition to marriage and parenthood.Young men, especially those from weaker family lineages, often depend on the decision of elders to be able to marry, and they often have to provide labor to their future in-laws in exchange for their wives (World Bank 2006c).A young man also needs a certain level of financial independence to be able to afford marriage.Delays in marriage can lead to frus- tration, social exclusion, and ultimately violence (Correia and Bannon 2006). Becoming an independent household head occurs late in life for Sierra Leonean Figure 2.5 Share of Population That Is Married, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location 100 90 80 70 tionalu 60 pop 50 of 40 centr pe 30 20 10 0 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 age total rural female urban male Source: Authors' calculations based on 2004 Population and Housing Census (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c). 22 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Figure 2.6 Share of Population That Heads a Household, by Age and Gender 70 60 50 tionalu 40 pop of 30 centr pe 20 10 0 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 age male female Source: Authors' calculations based on 2004 Population and Housing Census (Statistics Sierra Leone 2005c). men: only 22 percent are household heads at 24, and just 65 percent are house- hold heads by 35 (figure 2.6). Citizenship Youth is the period during which people begin to be heard and recognized out- side their families.They start to participate in social and political life on their own.This involves rights, such as the right to vote and the right to a fair trial, and obligations, such as paying taxes (World Bank 2006c). Political marginalization of young people, especially in rural Sierra Leone, contributed to the formation of the rebel forces. Promoting productive civic engagement of young people at the national and local level is crucial for the sustainable, peaceful development of the country.As former Secretary-General of the United Nations KofiAnnan said,"No one is born a good citizen; no nation is born a democracy. Rather both are processes that continue to evolve over a lifetime.Young people must be included Young People in Sierra Leone 23 from birth.A society that cuts off from its youth severs its lifeline" (cited inWorld Bank 2006c, p. 183). The government has made significant progress developing policies to strengthen the voice of young people in political life. In 2003 it adopted the Sierra Leone National Youth Policy. A National Youth Advisory Council was set up at the national level inside the Ministry of Youth and Sports, which coordinates all government policy and programs related to young people and ensures inclusion and participation of affiliated organizations. At the local level, District Youth Committees have been set up to strengthen development issues at the local level, with membership drawn from youth organizations, NGOs, young work- ers, and youth clubs (Government of Sierra Leone 2003).After the 2007 presi- dential and parliamentary elections, the Ministry of Youth and Sports was transferred to the new Ministry of Education,Youth and Sports.The president's vision for youth employment and empowerment includes the creation of a NationalYouth Commission--to provide the focused policy direction for and leadership of the many agencies and departments of the government dealing with the issues of youth--and nationwide labor centers to invest in the country's work force and assist in job placement (UN 2008). Social activism among young people is increasing, although their voice at the political level remains more muted than that of adults.The postwar period saw a remarkable upsurge in self-organized social activism among young people. Many communities have developed strong informal networks and local institutions,partly as a reaction to the breakdown of national structures.There is some evidence that social networks and institutions are strongest in those parts of the country hit hard- est by the war (Bellows and Miguel 200;World Bank 2006c).A survey byWhiteside and Zimmer (2006) of rural communities in Sierra Leone explores various aspects of citizenship.3Two trends emerge.First,women score substantially lower than men on a variety of measures of political awareness,political and community participa- tion,and associational activity.Second,both men and women are the most knowl- edgeable and active in their middle years (30­40). Young people have somewhat less access to information and knowledge of local governance than adults.They were less likely than adults to vote in the 2002 gen- eral election and the 2004 local government election,4 although their intentions to vote in the presidential elections of June 2007 were similar to those of adults.Their voice in community decisions is weaker than that of adults; they generally attend fewer community meetings,speak less during meetings,and lack local leaders their age. Community-designated "youth" leaders tend to be older, often older than 35. In the surveyed communities,39 percent of designated leaders were past 35,and 96 percent were past 24. Notably, more than 10 percent of these "youth" leaders were over 50. In terms of citizens' perceptions of their own empowerment, respondents were asked whether they felt they had any chance of changing an unjust local gov- ernment policy or an unjust chiefdom law. In both cases, young women, adult women,and young men were significantly less likely than adult men to report that they had some ability to change the policy or law (Whiteside and Zimmer 2006). 24 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Conclusions Understanding the social context in Sierra Leone is necessary to analyze the opportunities and constraints today's young people face.While the social patterns in postconflict Sierra Leone are changing, intergenerational tensions remain.The social,political,and economic marginalization of young people before the conflict resulted in lack of opportunities, spreading despair, and the feeling of being exploited by elders who in more prosperous times would have been more willing and able to help young people with education or jobs in exchange for political loy- alty.Studies since the conflict have shown that some kind of"youth emancipation" has taken place; elders cannot rely as much as they did in the past on their cus- tomary authority to exploit young people. Elders from strong lineages (male and female) have stakes in reviving the old system to hold on to their power. Customs and regulations concerning relations between elders and young people are still deemed to have morally binding force.Young people still feel the control of elders over their labor and access to land. Education levels for young people remain low. Some 35 percent of 15- to 24- year-olds and 63 percent of 25- to 35-year-olds never attended school. For both age groups, only 20 percent finished primary school. While literacy rates among young people are higher than for adults, they remain very low, at 53 percent for adolescents, 40 percent for youth, and 29 percent for young adults. The overall health of the population,including sexual and reproductive health, remains poor. Infant, child, and maternal mortality rates are among the highest in the world, and both teenage pregnancy levels and rates of sexually transmitted infections are high. Young adults (25­35) are similar to adults. Like older adults, almost all young adults have left the schooling system;they have similar reproductive experiences as adults and are as knowledgeable and active in political life at the community level. Young adults may have fewer opportunities for work, however, because of their limited social capital compared with adults.Another difference is that only as young adults do most men transition into family life and become independent household heads. In contrast, young adult women's levels of motherhood are comparable to those of mature adult women. Notes 1. This section is based largely on Richards, Bah, and James (2004) and Peters (2006). 2. The categories of permitted unpaid labor include the building and repair of the para- mount chief's house, the construction and repair of government buildings, emergency work to combat epidemics and famine,and communal services under the Public Health Ordinance (sanitation, protection of water supplies, maintenance of main paths and bridges). In some circumstances a paramount chief may also require communities to make a rice farm. Young People in Sierra Leone 25 3. The figures in this report are based on data from the GoBifo/ENCISS/Decentralization baseline (November 2005-January 2006), which covers wards in 3 of 19 local council areas.The survey was conducted by the Evaluation Unit of the Institutional Reform and Capacity Building Project, with technical oversight from researchers at the Abdul Latif Jameel PovertyAction Lab,the University of California at Berkeley,and theWorld Bank. 4. Self-reported voting participation in the general election of 2002 was 77 percent for men and 73 percent for women 18-24, versus 94 and 88 percent, respectively for male and female adults. Reported self-voting in recent local government elections shows similar trends (Whiteside and Zimmer 2006). TheTransition from School toWork 3 O ne of the key transitions from childhood to adulthood is leaving school and becoming a full-time worker or homemaker. Many social scientists consider the start of working life the most important marker of inde- pendence (World Bank 2006c).This transition results in five possible states: · Full-time student:The person is in school and not working. He or she may be searching for a job, but school is the main activity. · Student and worker:The person is both in school and working. He or she may be engaged in paid or unpaid labor. · Unemployed:The person is not in school and not working but is available for work and searching for a job. · Inactive in the labor market:The person is not in school, not working, and not looking for a job.This category may include young mothers who work long hours in hidden labor while caring for their children or households.It may also include young men or women who are "truly inactive," meaning that they are not engaged in any productive activity. · Worker: The person is not in school and has a job.The job may be paid or unpaid, full time or part time. This chapter traces the transition through these labor market states for young men and women. It finds that young people generally leave school, enter unpaid labor, and graduate to self-employment; a small number end their work lives in wage employment.Success in navigating these transitions differs by gender and by urban or rural residence; social norms, local markets, and poverty play key roles in determining a young person's success on the path. In contrast, education seems to play a minor role.The years between 20 and 24 represent the"transition age":inac- tivity in the labor market and unemployment rates are highest during this time, which is also the period during which young people have left school and begun 27 28 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone their full-time work lives.(For a complete list of statistics discussed in this chapter, see appendix A.1.) Time Use amongYoung People in Sierra Leone Young people divide their time among many different school, employment, or inactivity states.The distribution of time use differs by gender, age, and urban or rural residence. Leaving School School attendance declines rapidly with age.Four of every five boys and girls 9­14 are in school,but attendance rates sharply diverge thereafter (figure 3.1).By 15­19 just three of every five boys and two of every five girls are full-time students. By 25­35 few men and almost no women are in school.1 The reasons for leaving school are mixed. Financial constraints can be a reason for leaving school. Young people report that they feel that they have obtained the skills needed for the labor market.Thus their school leaving can be a reflection of their judgment that they have extracted all that is marketable (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). As people age they become more attractive to, and attracted by, the labor market.This makes school an expensive activity, because full-time Figure 3.1 Time Use in Sierra Leone, by Age and Gender 100 80 time 60 of centr 40 pe 20 0 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 male male male male male female female female female female inactive only work only school unemployed school + work Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. TheTransition from School toWork 29 students are sacrificing income to attend school. With age the opportunity cost of not working increases, because older workers tend to earn higher wages. Girls leave school earlier than boys because of social norms. At a young age, social expectations begin to enter the time-use decision of young women.Young people claim that some families do not value girls' education beyond the primary years and discourage further education (World Bank and ENCISS 2007).They perceive that families encourage more education for boys.As discussed in chapter 2, young women begin their reproductive role and their married life earlier than men do, with 17 percent of 16-year-old and about 47 percent of 19-year-old women mothers;more than half of young women are married by 19.Marriage and motherhood contribute to early school dropout. Men begin their married lives later: only about half of men are married by 27.They remain in their parents' households longer and therefore have more freedom to continue their education. Young people in rural areas begin the transition out of school earlier than young people in urban areas. Some 87 percent of 9- to 14-year-olds in urban areas and just 68 percent in rural areas are still in school (figure 3.2). By 15­19 the figures fall to 68 percent and 43 percent, respectively. By 20­24 only slightly more than 1 in 10 rural youth is in school, compared with 3 in 10 urban youth. Earlier school leaving in rural areas may reflect several factors. First, the oppor- tunity cost of work may be higher in rural areas, where subsistence agriculture is the norm and families who own land need family members to work it,particularly Figure 3.2 Time Use in Sierra Leone, by Age and Urban-Rural Location 100 80 time 60 of centr 40 pe 20 0 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 urban urban urban urban urban rural rural rural rural rural inactive only work only school unemployed school + work Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. 30 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone given labor shortages in rural areas (chapter 4). Second, there is a shortage of sec- ondary schools in rural areas.Third, the value of school may not be high to young people or their families,where"walking behind one's father"is considered the best preparation for the job market.The focus group discussions reveal that although farming is not considered a profession and parents would prefer that their children go to school, learn a trade, and get a job, the pressures of daily life lead to a differ- ent outcome (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). Less than 2 percent of Sierra Leoneans of any age, gender, or location combine work and school.This low incidence is common across Sub-SaharanAfrica (World Bank 2007b),although it is not common in other developing regions in the world. The low propensity to combine work and school may be a statistical artifact emerging from the way the questions in the survey were asked--"what is your pri- mary activity?"--which precludes stating more than one response.Alternatively, it may reflect a tendency for students to view market work as extra activities outside of their main responsibility, which is school. Finding One's Way: Inactivity and Unemployment A key concern of policymakers and citizens in Sierra Leone is the abundance of inactive young people, primarily young men who do not appear to be engaged in school or work.While policymakers are concerned about the current and future welfare of these young men, they may also be concerned about the link between violence and inactivity. Unemployment among young people and civil violence are positively correlated, suggesting that the concerns of policymakers are well founded (World Bank 2006c). To better understand inactivity in the labor market and unemployment in Sierra Leone, it is important to clarify the terminology used in this report (figure 3.3): · Jobless: The person is not in school or working. People who are jobless are either inactive in the labor market or looking for a job (jobless people looking for work are usually referred to as unemployed). · Inactive in the labor market: The person is not in school, not working, and not looking for a job.2 People who are inactive in the labor market can be divided into four categories: ­ Truly inactive in the labor market: The person is not working and has no inten- tion of finding work.3 ­ Somewhat unemployed: The person is either awaiting reply from a job inquiry; waiting to start a job (that is,the employment has been offered but the start date has not yet arrived);or trying to set up his or her own firm.These peo- ple are considered "somewhat unemployed" because, although they have finished their job search,there is uncertainty if the job will actually materi- alize or they will succeed in setting up a firm. ­ Active in nonmarket activities: The person is dedicating his or her time to home duties. TheTransition from School toWork 31 ­ Other legitimate inactivity:The person is not working or studying because of illness, old age, disability, or other similar reason. · Unemployed: The person is not in school or working but is available for work and searching for a job.All unemployed people are classified as participating in the labor market.4 One in four young men is jobless (neither working nor in school).Male jobless- ness begins at a very young age:among 9- to 14-year-olds,1 of every 10 boys is either unemployed or inactive in the labor market. Among youth 20­24, the rate rises to 3 in 10. This is the peak of male joblessness. At older ages the percentage of men who are inactive in the labor market or unemployed decreases to 2 in 10 for young adults and 1 in 10 for men 36 and older.For all ages most joblessness is a result of inactivity in the labor market,with less than 14 percent of all jobless men unemployed. Only 5­10 percent of men who are inactive in the labor market can be consid- ered truly inactive, meaning that they do not work and have no intention of find- ing work (table 3.1).5 The truly inactive rate among 20- to 24-year-olds (9 percent) is significantly higher than for other young people or adults.Some of the truly inac- tive are discouraged workers: they would like to work but do not believe there are any jobs for them.This is revealed by the comments of focus group participants, who feel that employers,knowing that there is abundant unskilled labor,offer wages that are so low that the potential worker prefers to be inactive in the labor market (World Bank and ENCISS 2007).In rural areas farming is not considered a real job, so young people prefer to be inactive in the labor market rather than engage in Figure 3.3 Activities of Jobless in Sierra Leone,Ages 15­35 Inacti ve in the labo r marke t unemployed truly inactive somewhat unemployed active in nonmarket activities, household duties other legitimate nonmarket activities (sick, disabled, too old) other Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. 32 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table 3.1 Profile of the Jobless, by Age and Gender (percent) Male Female Status 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 Truly inactive in the labor market 5.4 9.0 5.0 3.1 0.5 3.1 3.5 1.7 Somewhat unemployed 5.6 7.3 11.5 5.7 6.6 6.5 2.7 5.6 Active in nonmarket activities: home duties 39.8 16.9 24.6 9.1 68.1 50.6 59.2 33.9 Reasons for inactivity Old agea 0 0.96 0.85 3.2 0.1 1.9 0.6 15.3 Sickness/disability 18.2 5.1 19.6 56.3 13.7 14.4 21.0 32.3 Otherb 30.9 60.7 38.5 22.4 11.0 23.5 13.0 11.1 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. a. Respondent believes that employers would like to hire younger workers. b. Not specified in the survey. farming (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). Other truly inactive men are seasonal workers who have no intention of working in the offseason. The majority of young men who are inactive in the labor market are classified as "somewhat unemployed,""engaged in nonmarket activities," or "not working for other reasons." Those who say that they are awaiting a reply from a job inquiry, waiting to start a job, or setting up a firm--the "somewhat unemployed"--repre- sent almost 10 percent of young men who are inactive in the labor market.The size of this category increases with age. Whether these job opportunities are real or represent wishful thinking is not clear,but optimistically these people can be con- sidered as somewhat unemployed.One-quarter of all young men who are inactive in the labor market report that they dedicate their time to home duties ("active in nonmarket activities") but only 9 percent of adult men report the same. The heavy allocation of young men's time to home duties may reflect work in rural activities, where market and domestic work often overlap. Up to 20 percent of young peo- ple who are inactive in the labor market have legitimate reasons for not working or studying, ranging from illness to disability.As expected, these rates are signifi- cantly lower among young people than adults. Young women have the same jobless rates as young men,but they begin at ear- lier ages.By 9­14,1 of every 10 girls is jobless,meaning that they are either unem- ployed or inactive in the labor market.This figure is the same share as that for boys the same age (figure 3.1). However, female joblessness increases rapidly: by 15­19, 2 of every 10 women are jobless, while men have the same joblessness rates they did at 9­14.By 20­24 men catch up and surpass women,with more than 3 of every 10 men jobless, compared with 2.5 of every 10 women.Women's trends later in TheTransition from School toWork 33 life also differ from men's,because men's joblessness falls with time while women's stabilizes in their early 20s. As with men,most joblessness among women is a result of inactivity in the labor market, with less than 9 percent of jobless women claim- ing they are unemployed. Women's greater inactivity in the labor market is largely a result of household duties. About 60 percent of young women who do not participate in the labor market report that they are not working or looking for work because they are ded- icated to home duties (table 3.1). This is consistent with the early marriage and childbearing discussed in chapter 2 and highlighted by the focus group discussions (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). As expected, household responsibilities are a greater burden for women than men and limit the types of jobs (hours, location) women can take. Only 3 percent of young women are truly inactive (compared with 7 percent for young men),and only 5 percent are waiting to start a job (com- pared with 9 percent for young men). The percentage of young people who are neither working nor in school is higher in rural than urban areas,but the rural jobless are younger than their urban counter- parts.Among rural 9- to 14-year-olds, 1 in 10 is neither working nor in school-- twice the rate among their urban counterparts (figure 3.4).The higher rate in rural areas reflects earlier school dropout,the seasonality of rural employment,and earlier marriage and motherhood among girls. By 15­19, 13 percent of young people in urban and rural areas are inactive in the labor market; by 20­24, one in three urban youth is inactive in the labor market compared with one in six rural youth. The rapid increase in inactivity in urban areas is likely the result of the difficulty in finding jobs there (in rural areas work on a parent's or chief's land is usually available), coupled with the fact that more young people leave school as they age. Figure 3.4 Unemployment Rates in Sierra Leone, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location 25 cent)r 20 (pe te 15 ra 10 yment 5 nemplou 0 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 age total male female urban rural Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. 34 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Less than 5 percent of young people are unemployed (that is,searched for a job for at least one hour the past week).Unemployment among both men and women peaks at 20­24. Most youth unemployment is in urban areas, especially the Freetown area.This may reflect the abundance of work opportunities in labor- scarce rural areas or the complete absence of employment, which discourages young people from looking for work. Young men have higher unemployment rates than young women as a result of their higher education levels. More than 7 percent of men 15­24 report that they are searching for jobs, compared with 5 percent of women.These rates differ by age group: among 15- to 19-year-olds, women have higher unemployment rates, but men's rates exceed women's after age 20 (figure 3.4). Men's higher rate of unemployment is largely explained by their higher education levels: men and women the same age with the same education levels have the same unemployment rates (appendix A.2 for regression specification and estimates). The scarcity of skilled jobs may be underlying educated men's higher unemployment rates. Urban young people are 25 times more likely to be unemployed than their rural counterparts.Among 15- to 19-year-olds,urban unemployment rates are 17.4 per- cent, compared with 0.7 percent in rural areas.The gap decreases with age but remains substantial. The differential remains even after equalizing education levels across rural and urban zones. Higher urban unemployment rates among young people are a result of fewer paid or unpaid job opportunities in urban areas than in rural areas, where work on the family's or the chief's land is an option. The unemployment rate is higher among young people (5.9 percent) than among adults (3.8 percent among 25- to 35-year-olds and 1.5 percent among people over 35).Although young people are four times as likely as adults to be unemployed,this is a better situation than in most Sub-SaharanAfrican countries (World Bank 2007b). At first glance it is somewhat surprising that young people,who are more edu- cated than their elders,have a harder time finding jobs than adults.Unemployment rates increase with the level of education, however, through junior-secondary school.6 This suggests that more-educated young people either have fewer labor market opportunities or they hold out longer for jobs than do people with less education. It also suggests that education alone cannot compensate for lack of experience: 20- to 24-year-olds with more education are more frequently unem- ployed than adults (appendixA.2 for regression specification and estimates).(chap- ter 4 addresses this point by identifying the skills that employers value, which are not primarily those gained in schools.) Unemployment among young people lasts two years on average; adult unem- ployment lasts longer. Nearly all unemployed adults claim that they have been searching for a job for more than two years,but only half of unemployed 15- to 19- year-olds and two-thirds of unemployed 20- to 35-year-olds reported searching that long (figure 3.5). While one could argue that young people necessarily have shorter unemployment spells because they are new entrants to the labor force, the similar duration of unemployment for the 20­24 and the 25­34 age groups suggests otherwise.Instead,three separate phenomena occur at each stage of life:the youngest TheTransition from School toWork 35 Figure 3.5 Time Spent by Unemployed Searching for a Job, by Age 100 80 tionalu 60 pop of 40 centr pe 20 0 15­19 20­24 25­35 35­65 age < 3 months 12­24 months 3­6 months 25+ months 6­12 months Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. group is only beginning their unemployment spells, so they are shorter; by 20­24 youth are at equilibrium duration of unemployment; and a group of older workers cannot integrate into the labor force. Notably, while young people have shorter unemployment duration than adults, the duration still lasts two years on average. The traditional International Labor Organization definition of unemployment-- the proportion of the labor force in a particular age group that is looking for a job--is more appropriate in OECD countries than in Sierra Leone or Sub-Saharan Africa. Unemployment rates fail to capture discouraged workers, high inactivity rates in the labor market, and the quality of work.A large number of young peo- ple are inactive in the labor market (not working, not in school, and not looking for work). Many of these people are discouraged workers, people who would like to work but are not looking anymore because they believe there are no jobs avail- able.As in other Sub-Saharan African countries, many people in Sierra Leone are too poor to be unemployed and must take up work regardless of its quality or level of remuneration (World Bank 2007b).As discussed below,the levels of unpaid labor are very high in Sierra Leone, especially in rural areas where subsistence farming is the norm. Unemployment rates also fail to capture underemployment. In Sub- Saharan Africa many people who are categorized as employed are working fewer hours than they would like (World Bank 2007b). Young people in the transition period search for jobs through informal means. While 39 percent of the unemployed ask friends and relatives if they know about job opportunities,more than 62 percent of 20- to 24-year-old unemployed youth use this method (table 3.2).As noted in chapter 4, this is a good strategy, because 36 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table 3.2 What DidYou Do in the Past Seven Days to Find Work? (percent) Applied to Visited firms Asked Took action Started an prospective and other friends/ to start own agricultural Age group employers work sites relatives firm activity 15­19 40.5 4.7 32.5 12.9 9.4 20­24 26.4 2.1 62.3 3.0 6.3 25­35 32.9 21.2 33.1 4.8 8.1 35-65 29.0 18.3 23.0 6.1 23.5 Total 28.2 13.2 38.5 5.9 12.1 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note: Rows sum to 100.0 percent. most firms hire workers through personal connections and word of mouth.People 15­19 and 25­35 prefer direct job search (applying to employers or visiting firms/work sites). People 15­19 have the greatest propensity to start their own firms.Young people are frustrated by informal methods of job search,because they believe that they have fewer labor market connections than adults and thus do not have a fair chance to compete for a job.As a result, they feel that they end up in more physically demanding and less glamorous jobs than those obtained through personal connections (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). Working Young women are often perceived as lazy (World Bank and ENCISS 2007).In fact, they begin their work lives earlier than men. By 9­14, 16 percent of girls identify their main activity as work,while only 13 percent of boys do so.This gap increases with age, as girls increasingly leave school to start families, join their husband's household, and take on adult employment roles while boys are still full-time stu- dents.As young adults, men have caught up to women, with three of every four men or women identifying employment as their full-time activity. Men's employ- ment increases in adulthood, while women's decreases slightly (figure 3.6). Labor force participation rates of male and urban young adults remain signifi- cantly lower than those of the adult population. Labor force participation rates among 25- to 35-year-olds are almost 10 percent lower than those of adult men and urban populations. Conversely, rates among female and rural young adults are comparable to those of people over 35. This can be partially explained by the higher levels of inactivity in the labor market for male and urban young adults compared with the adult population. Contrary to popular belief, migrants have higher employment rates than nonmigrants (box 3.1). Young people in rural areas start work earlier and work more hours than their urban counterparts. By 9­14, 1 in 5 rural girls and boys cites working as a full-time TheTransition from School toWork 37 Figure 3.6 Labor Force Participation, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location 100 cent)r 80 (pe tiona 60 ticip arp 40 cer fo r 20 boal 0 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 age male female urban rural Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Box 3.1 Migrants and the Labor Market Migrants are blamed for being "idle" in Freetown. But a closer look at the data shows that migrants are actually more integrated into the labor market than nonmigrants. Relative to nonmigrants in the same regions with the same level of education, age, and gender composition, migrants are 14 percent more likely than nonmigrants to be employed (older migrants and nonmigrants have the same labor force participation rates) (appendix A.2). The reason for higher employment among migrants may be linked to the reason for migration. During the war, many young people fled their chiefdoms in search of safety or as a result of atrocities they committed there.After the war, they did not want to or could not return to their homes.These people lack the strong social networks that keep people fed even when they are not working.They may therefore have a greater incentive to work. Some migrants may also be economic migrants, who moved in search of job opportunities and thus are more committed to the labor market. New migrants may be migrating in search of formal sector employ- ment. Migrants have a slightly greater (and statistically significant) chance of finding formal sector jobs. Migrants who return to their hometowns have a lower (and statistically significant) chance of being employed in the formal sector (appendix A.2 for regression specification and results). 38 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone activity, compared with 1 in 20 in urban areas.The gap decreases with age, with 70 percent of rural 20- to 24-year-olds working compared with 40 percent of urban youth the same age. By 35­65, rural and urban adults have nearly identical work- only rates (figure 3.6).Thus young people in urban areas start work later and take longer to reach adult levels of employment than their rural counterparts.This trend is similar to that in other countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (World Bank 2007b). The earlier and higher work rates of rural young people are a result of several fac- tors specific to rural life. Students leave school earlier in rural than in urban areas. The abundance of productive activities in family agriculture, paid or unpaid, pro- vides an immediate source of employment, which is scarcer in urban areas.Young people report that while they do not consider farming a career, it is a job they can fall back on if nothing else is available.The scarcity of jobs in urban areas, and the feeling that employers are exploitative,may lead to higher levels of discouraged work- ers among urban youth (20­24),as discussed above.Rural women may have greater ability to combine work and domestic responsibilities than do urban women.7 TYPE OF WORK. Youth not only transition from school to work, they also transi- tion through types of jobs.This section describes each stage of the cycle. UNPAID LABOR. The vast majority of young people begin their work lives in unpaid labor. More than 50 percent of young people in urban areas and 70 per- cent of in rural areas are unpaid workers (figure 3.7). Unpaid work could include working on a family farm in a rural area or working as an apprentice in a family member's shop in Freetown. Figure 3.7 Percentage of Workers Who Are Unpaid Employees, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location 80 70 60 tionalu 50 pop 40 of 30 centr pe20 10 0 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 age male female urban rural Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. TheTransition from School toWork 39 At every age, women and rural workers are more often employed in unpaid labor than men and urban workers.At 15­19 women and rural residents are 10­15 percentage points more likely than men or urban residents to be unpaid workers. Although unpaid labor declines with age for all Sierra Leoneans, it falls more quickly for men and urban workers, as men start their own businesses rather than working in someone else's firm or farm, and urban workers leave the family busi- ness for wage or self-employment. Even though young people are better educated than adults, they have a higher incidence of unpaid labor. For a given level of education, unpaid labor among young people is greater than adult unpaid labor (appendix A.2 for the regression specifications and results). Although unpaid labor declines with age, one in three adults in Sierra Leone is working without pay.Four of every 10 working women are employed in their hus- band's store or farm. Among adult men,23 percent are working without pay.Some are rural workers who are subsistence farmers,have not yet inherited their parents' land, or are working a family member's land.About 16 percent of working adults in urban areas are unpaid. While much of this is family labor,and profits are shared through household pooling of expenditures, this statistic suggests that unpaid young people will not necessarily become independent income-earning adults. SELF-EMPLOYMENT. Self-employment increases with age.While many young people believe that self-employment is the most viable employment sector for them (World Bank and ENCISS 2007), only one of every three working young people is self-employed, compared with half of working adults (figure 3.8). For Figure 3.8 Percentage of Workers Who Are Self-Employed, by Gender, Urban-Rural Location, and Age 60 55 50 tionalu 45 pop 40 of 35 centr pe30 25 20 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 age male female urban rural Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. 40 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone women and men in both urban and rural areas, the share of self-employed work- ers increases with age. Men become self-employed at an earlier age than women. By 25­35 nearly 57 percent of men are self-employed. In contrast, female self-employment does not exceed 50 percent until women reach mature adulthood (36­65).This is largely the result of women's greater unpaid labor when they are younger,as they work in their parents' and then their husbands' firms and farms. Only once they reach a more mature age do they begin selling in markets, processing agricultural goods, or engaging in other small-scale activities (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). Urban young people are more likely to be self-employed than those in rural areas at all ages, but rural self-employment rates increase with age. Between the ages of 15 and 24, urban young people are 10 percentage points more likely to be self-employed than their rural counterparts; the gap closes in the young adult and adult periods. This may reflect the life cycle of rural labor, starting as an unpaid laborer on a family's land and,over time,inheriting rights to the land and running one's own farm. It may also reflect the life cycle of young urban dwellers, who stay in school longer, try out self-employment, and, if lucky, grad- uate to the wage sector. The data do not reveal if the lower self-employment rates among youth are the result of a lack of capital or social constraints.Young people point out that credit opportunities are limited for them,that they do not have the capital (tools) to make a potential firm productive,and that they lack the connections needed to buy cheaper inputs, access markets, or improve other business conditions (World Bank and ENCISS 2007).Family expectations and tribal obligations may also limit the ability of young people to strike out on their own.With age these constraints may loosen. WAGE EMPLOYMENT. Wage employment, while scarce, increases with age, ris- ing with each successively older age group (figure 3.9).This increase is sharpest in urban areas,where wage opportunities are greatest.The ratio of youth to adult paid labor (0.3) is among the highest in Sub-Saharan African (based on data for 13 countries excluding Sierra Leone) (World Bank 2007b).The gap between male and urban young adults on the one hand and mature adults on the other remains large. Women and rural workers have very low rates of wage employment, and the figure barely changes with age.Wage employment is never more than 4 percent of employment for even the oldest rural age group; it represents a mere 1 percent of employment among rural youth 20­24. Nationally, women's wage employment reaches 7 percent for the 25­35 age group.This low level demonstrates that wage employment is an urban, male phenomenon. The paid labor market values experience over education.As discussed in chapter 2, adults have less education than young people, but young people hold fewer wage jobs (which purportedly are more skill based). Comparing wage employment of young people and adults with the same level of education,greater wage employment still exists among adults.The size of the gap falls,suggesting that the higher level of education of young people helps more of them become wage laborers but that TheTransition from School toWork 41 Figure 3.9 Percentage of Workers Who Earn Wages, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location 35 30 tionalu 25 20 pop of 15 centr 10 pe 5 0 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 age male female urban rural Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. education is not powerful enough to overcome the disadvantage of being young (appendix A.2 for regression specification and estimates). Young people attribute this to their perception that labor market connections rather than merit are the key factor in hiring decisions (World Bank 2007b). Almost 70 percent of all unemployed people in Sierra Leone are hoping to join the wage sector (figure 3.10). Another 25 percent would like to become self- employed, using loans from families or financial institutions.The desire of young people to be self-employed decreases over time, with 30 percent of unemployed 15- to 19-year-olds preferring this type of work,compared with 16 percent of 25- to 35-year-olds.However,27 percent of adults favor self-employment.Most unem- ployed people report that they are available for full-time work; 25 percent of the unemployed would accept part-time work. FORMAL SECTOR EMPLOYMENT. Formal sector wage jobs that offer benefits are the most coveted. Formal sector employment is small in Sierra Leone, at less than 10 percent for the overall population. The formal sector is not a sector of entry:less than 1 percent of Sierra Leoneans under 19-year-olds, 3 percent of 20- to 24-year-olds, and 8 percent of 25- to 35- year-olds hold formal sector jobs. By age 36­65, 13 percent of the age group hold formal sector jobs (figure 3.11). Formal sector employment increases over time among all groups. Given the trends observed for wage employment, it is not surprising that formal sector employment is highest among men and in urban areas.Up to 10 percent of work- ing men and 20 percent of urban workers are formal sector employees by age 35. 42 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Figure 3.10 Type of Work Sought by the Unemployed, by Age 80 70 tionalu 60 50 pop 40 of 30 centr 20 pe10 0 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 age wage employment self-employment wage employment or self-employment Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Figure 3.11 Percentage of Workers in the Formal Sector, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location 35 30 tionalu 25 20 pop of 15 centr 10 pe 5 0 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 age male female urban rural total Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note: Formal sector workers are defined as those receiving job benefits. The largest increase in formal sector employment occurs between ages 20­24 and 25­35, allowing time for young workers to cycle through unpaid, self-employed, and informal wage work to build up the labor connections and experience to secure a formal sector wage job.Higher formal sector employment of men is partly the result of higher education levels;if female education levels were equal to those of men,the gap between men's and women's formal sector employment would be TheTransition from School toWork 43 much smaller. However, educational differences between women and men do not explain everything--there seems to be a premium to being male that is not explained by other factors. Although formal sector employment is low among young people, it would be up to 4 percent lower than the levels observed if young people had the same edu- cation levels as adults.Thus while experience is necessary to access the formal sector, education also opens doors to this sector (appendix A.2 for regression spec- ification and estimates). Employees in the formal sector are more skilled than other workers.The like- lihood of having a formal sector job increases with education level.Thus while the risk of unemployment increases as a person has more education, once he or she finds a job, it is more likely to be in the formal sector. INDUSTRY. The main economic activity in Sierra Leone is agricultural work, which accounts for 70 percent of employment (26 percent in urban and 91 per- cent in rural areas) (figures 3.12 and 3.13). Agriculture is the largest industry in Sierra Leone,and it is overwhelmingly labor intensive.In farming activities young men prepare the land for cultivation and harvest;young women weed,harvest,and prepare the harvest for consumption or sale. While males and females are equally likely to be agricultural workers, more female-headed households undertake this activity.The agricultural sector is a source of employment for both genders.And while household heads as a group do not engage in agricultural activities as much as household dependents do, household Figure 3.12 Distribution of the Labor Force, by Industry,Age, and Gender 100 90 cer 80 fo 70 r 60 boal 50 of 40 centr 30 pe 20 10 0 5 5 5 5 5 5 9­14 5­19 9­14 5­19 male 1 20­24 25­3 35­6 15­6 15­24 1 20­24 25­3 35­6 15­6 15­24 male male male male male male ale ale ale ale ale ale ale fem fem fem fem fem fem fem agriculture manufacturing wholesale and retail mining construction services 44 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Figure 3.13 Distribution of the Labor Force by Industry,Age, and Urban-Rural Location 100 90 cer 80 fo 70 r boal 60 50 of 40 30 centr 20 pe 10 0 5 5 5 5 5 5 urbanurban 1urban 20­24n 25ban 3urban 1urban 1 9­14 5­19 ­3 5­6 5­6 5­24 l 9­14l 15­19l 20­24l 25­3 l 35­6 15­6 15­24 l l urba ur rura rura rura rura rura rura rura agriculture manufacturing wholesale and retail mining construction services Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. heads who are females disproportionately work in this sector.This is likely closely linked to their participation in the retail sector (appendixA.2) and the higher prob- ability of combining agricultural activities with household duties compared with other employment opportunities with less flexibility. According to theWorld Bank (2006b), the agricultural and agrobusiness sector is the main driver of poverty reduction in the short and medium term.The sector has the potential to absorb unskilled youth on a large scale.In the short term,food crop production will certainly be the main driver of agricultural growth and poverty reduction.The food crop sector accounts for 60 percent of rural nonmin- ing GDP, and there is still significant potential to meet unsatisfied latent demand and replace imports.In the medium to longer term,promotion of export products such as cocoa and gari offers the greatest potential for major increases in employ- ment opportunities and incomes in rural areas. Increasing areas under cultivation holds significant potential in Sierra Leone, where there is abundant land and low-skilled labor and where most traditional cash crop production was severely curtailed or halted by the war.Rehabilitation of and investment in the production, processing, and marketing of cashews, cocoa, gari, ginger, and milled rice offer the best opportunities for expanding agricultural exports.These crops are produced and processed primarily by smallholders and small business enterprises.Better processing technologies would not only raise the incomes of processors,they would also likely increase demand for primary products as an input into processing.Total (direct and indirect) potential employment gains are estimated at 72,000 person-years (World Bank 2006b). TheTransition from School toWork 45 Other potential areas for future employment of young people are livestock and artisanal fishery. These areas hold the potential for increased demand if average income levels increase, because they are sensitive to growth in incomes (World Bank 2006b). Many young people,especially males,do not want to be farmers.Farming is con- sidered too labor intensive and insufficiently profitable.Young people note that access to better tools (especially mechanized ones),opportunities for basic process- ing, and possibilities of higher returns would make farming much more attractive to them. Both young people and adults engage in subsistence farming to survive. Parents state that they do not want their children to remain farmers but instead want them to obtain the skills for farming as a fallback occupation in case they are not successful in school or fail to find a paying job (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). In areas with mining opportunities, young men are drawn away from agricul- tural activities in the (often vain) hope of obtaining higher earnings.Although the mining sector represents a small percentage of employment opportunities,it repre- sents the most important source of GDP in Sierra Leone.The sector accounts for only 1.4 percent of employment (4.3 percent among men 20­24 and 3.6 percent among men 25­35). Export revenues reached $134 million in 2005, equivalent to 11 percent of GDP. Mining output has been driven by the resumption of rutile, bauxite, and industrial diamond mining, supported by higher private investment. Diamond output has increased since 2005,and rutile and bauxite production,which resumed in the first quarter of 2006, increased in 2007. Gold output more than quadrupled between 2005 and 2007 (World Bank 2008a). Support to provide higher-level skills to young people in mining areas could increase their potential involvement in the emerging small-scale mechanized mining sector. Support to increase the share of revenue going to low-skilled labor in the artisanal mining sec- tor would benefit young men.While the artisanal mining sector is projected to decline in the near future, large numbers of young men participate at the bottom of the work chain and would benefit from revenue-sharing interventions. The service industry is underpopulated by young people (appendix A.2 for regression specification and results). Men tend to work in this sector more than women. A potential area of growth in the service industry is tourism. Small-scale beach hotels offer the best opportunity in the short term; larger-scale tourism has poten- tial in the medium to long term."Take-off"is constrained by the limits of entrepre- neurship in Sierra Leone and the difficulties in putting together all of the elements that make up a successful tourism industry (World Bank 2006b). Development of small-scale tourism would help partially respond to the need for stable employment for the large number of unemployed young people in the Freetown area. The retail industry disproportionately employs youth. The likelihood of working in the retail sector decreases with age.Women and migrants also tend to work in this sector.While household heads have greater employment in the retail industry than dependents, female household heads are less likely than male household heads to be employed there.The sector has organized groups of young 46 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone workers, such as vendors of music cassettes and jewelry. Girls and young women are heavily involved in the retail sale of agro products. The infrastructure sector also holds great potential for absorbing youth labor. Although the government has undertaken significant efforts to improve dilapidated infrastructure since the end of the conflict,infrastructure remains underdeveloped and a constraint to economic growth.Low-skilled labor could be partially absorbed through the ongoing and planned high levels of investment in infrastructure.There is also a huge backlog in maintenance,as scarce resources for road maintenance are spent on emergency works (World Bank 2006b). Developing innovative mecha- nisms for road maintenance and other services,such as garbage collection by small and medium-size enterprises, holds the potential to absorb both unskilled and skilled youth. UNDEREMPLOYMENT. Having a job is often not sufficient, because of low wages or the part-time or seasonal nature of employment. Underemployment can be interpreted as holding a job that offers less than full-time employment. Full-time work increases with age. Although young people in Sierra Leone rarely combine work and school, part-time employment is highest among the youngest workers (figure 3.14). However, 60 percent of 9- to 14-year-old work- ers are already working full time,and by 15­19 three-quarters of workers are doing so.This compares with 80 percent of adults working full time. One in five young people would like to work more hours.This share is con- stant across the 15­35 age group, but men's desire to work more hours increases with age while women's decreases with age (table 3.3).The difference probably reflects the fact that household duties conflict with full-time market work for women.Young people in both urban and rural areas would like to work more Figure 3.14 Share of Labor Force Working Part Time, by Age, Gender, and Urban-Rural Location 50 45 40 cer fo 35 r 30 boal 25 of 20 centr 15 pe10 5 0 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 male female urban rural Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. TheTransition from School toWork 47 Table 3.3 Share of Working Labor Force That Would Like to Work Longer Hours Characteristic 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 Male 9.2 17.7 21.8 23.1 18.9 Female 8.2 19.2 17.3 16.2 12.6 Urban 5.6 17.4 21.7 18.5 16.0 Rural 9.0 19.0 17.5 19.1 15.9 Total 8.6 18.6 18.9 18.9 15.9 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note: Figures show responses by employed participants to question "Did you want to work more hours during the past seven days?" hours.Adults are marginally happier than young people with the amount of hours they supply to the labor market, with one in six desiring longer work hours. QUALITY OF WORK. The desire to change jobs increases with age, peaking at age 25­35. Less than 1 percent of people 15­19 are searching for a new job.Almost 5 percent of working men 25- to 35-year-olds (and just 1.4 percent of their female counterparts) are looking for new jobs. The tendency to look for a new job is stronger in urban areas,where the spectrum of jobs is larger than in rural areas.Nearly 63 percent of those who are working and looking for a job have started their own agricultural activities, and another 6 percent are trying to start their own business. Most of those who are working and searching for jobs wish to transition to the self-employment sector.About 40­70 percent of nonagricultural firm owners and 91 percent of firm owners in the agriculture sector are looking for different busi- ness opportunities.This compares with only 19 percent of paid workers who want to open their own firms. Most unpaid workers (62 percent of those currently working in nonagricultural activities and 92 percent of those currently working in agriculture) hope to become self-employed.8 WAGES. Young people earn lower wages than adults (figure 3.15). At low wages, there are more 15- to 19-year-olds than any other age group (to the left of the ver- tical line);at high wages,there are fewer 15- to 19- year olds than any other age group (to the right of the vertical line).The number of people earning a low wage decreases with age, and the number earning a high wage increases with age. Wages are much lower in rural than urban labor markets. The dual spikes for each age group in figure 3.15 suggest that two underlying distributions exist, each with its own spike.Analysis of urban wages and rural wages confirm this suspicion: the spikes for each geographic area are consistent with the two spikes (per age group) in the combined sample (figure 3.16). In both urban and rural areas, workers earn more as they age (more of them are to the right of the vertical line).Comparing the urban and rural figures reveals that there are more workers earning high wages in urban areas than in rural areas, while the reverse is observed for low wages. 48 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Figure 3.15 Distribution of (Log) Annual Wages by Age Group .4 .3 .2 .1 0 8 10 12 14 16 ln (annual wage) 15­19 20­24 25­35 36+ Source:Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:The vertical line represents the wage at which people 15­19 switch from representing the largest group earning the wage to the smallest group earning the wage. Better-educated workers earn higher wages. But although education increases earnings in a statistically significant manner,the relation is not very strong in Sierra Leone.Education explains relatively little about why some workers earn more than others;most of the difference in wages across the population reflects other factors.9 People with more education do not earn much more than those with less educa- tion:on average a person with higher education earns roughly twice what a person with no formal education earns, while a person who completed primary school earns about 40 percent more than someone with no education (figure 3.17). Education does not explain the high number of low-income workers.Breaking out the earnings distribution by education group reveals that many people in all age-education groups earn low wages (that is, the long left tail persists across edu- cation groups) (figure 3.18).10 Within each education group, the young are not always the lowest earners.Among people with four to six years of education, for example,the share of people earning low wages is largest among people 15­19 (the 15­19 line is above those for all other age groups on the far left side of figure 3.18), but the percentage of people earning high wages is larger among people 15­19 than it is for people 36 and older (the 15­19 line is above the 36+ line on the right side of figure 3.18).Thus to some extent,education compensates for less job expe- rience. Finally, there is no evidence of a "labor aristocracy" earning exceptionally high wages. If there were such a group, the graph would have a long right tail. Minimum wages are not binding in Sierra Leone: none of the figures shows kinks or deformations that would suggest that minimum wages affect the wages paid by employers in either the rural or the urban sector.The wage distributions are relatively smooth, suggesting that a competitive labor market sets wages (Cunningham 2007).The fact that the minimum wage does not affect the paid wage is bad news,in that wages are lower than the government would like.But for TheTransition from School toWork 49 Figure 3.16 Distribution of (Log) Annual Wages, by Age Group and Urban-Rural Location (a) urban .4 .3 .2 .1 0 8 10 12 14 16 ln (annual wage) 15­19 20­24 25­35 36+ (b) rural .5 .4 .3 .2 .1 0 8 10 12 14 16 ln (annual wage) 15­19 2 > 0­24 25­35 36+ Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:The vertical line represents the wage at which people 15­19 switch from representing the largest group earning the wage to the smallest group earning the wage. young people,this can be good news,because in countries in which the minimum wage is binding, they tend to be the first to lose their jobs when the minimum wage is raised. Because the minimum wage does not appear to be binding, it is worth ques- tioning whether any labor legislation is enforced and affects employment or wages of young people in Sierra Leone.The data do not permit this issue to be tested. It is an issue for further analysis.11 50 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Figure 3.17 Additional Income Earned Attributable to Additional Education Completed 120 100 ned are 80 incomela cent)r 60 (pe 40 dditiona 20 0 1­3 years 4­6 years junior- senior- higher primary primary secondary secondary education school school school school Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note: Figure shows additional income earned relative to a worker with no formal education.The bars in this figure are the point estimates for each corresponding education dummy from an ordinary least squares regression of the log of annual wages on each education level. Benchmarking Sierra Leone to the Region Compared with young people elsewhere in the region, young people in Sierra Leone are doing relatively well in the labor market.Although young people in Sierra Leone have difficulty finding formal sector or even wage jobs, employ- ment for women and rural workers is stagnant, and wages in urban and rural areas are low,other labor markets in the region show even more troubling trends (table 3.4). While its labor force participation rates are relatively low for the region (6th of 14 countries), Sierra Leone has the third-highest rate of "educa- tion only" (after Malawi and Kenya).The relatively high levels of school atten- dance can be partially explained by the catching-up effect of young people who lost out on education opportunities during the conflict and by high levels of repetition.Young people combine work and school more in Sierra Leone than do they do in several countries in the region; doing so is preferable to dropping out of school. Inactivity rates among young people in Sierra Leone are on the low side:about 19 percent of people 15­35 neither work nor study.This figure is far lower than in Ethiopia (58 percent) or Mozambique (45 percent). Labor force participants in Sierra Leone are more likely to be working than unemployed.12 Unemployment rates for the region as a whole averaged 14.8 per- cent, while they were less than 3 percent in Sierra Leone (rates in Burundi,The Gambia, Malawi, and Uganda were below 2 percent).13 TheTransition from School toWork 51 Figure 3.18 Earnings, by Age and Education Levels in Urban Areas (a) workers with four to six years of schooling .3 .2 .1 0 10 12 14 16 18 ln (annual wage) (b) workers with junior-secondary school .5 .4 .3 .2 .1 0 8 10 12 14 16 ln (annual wage) (c) workers with senior-secondary school .5 .4 .3 .2 .1 0 11 12 13 14 15 16 ln (annual wage) 15­19 20­24 25­35 36+ Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Conclusions The transition for young men from school to work occurs between the ages of 20 and 24.They leave school in their mid- to late teens and either move directly to unpaid labor or spend time inactive in the labor market or unemployed.Those who are jobless may spend long periods in that state,but they are a minority of the pop- ulation. Men move from unpaid labor to the self-employment sector by 25­35; a 52 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table 3.4. Time Use Patterns among People 15­24 in Selected Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (percent of age group) Work and Working or Country Only school school Only work Unemployed Inactive unemployed Burkina Faso 11 1 78 4.2 5.9 83.2 Burundi 26 0 70 0.8 3.4 70.8 Cameroon 32 0 43 12.6 9.9 55.6 Côte d'Ivoire 26 0 47 9.6 17.6 56.6 Ethiopia 18 0 20 4 58.5 24.0 Gambia,The 28 1.1 37 1.5 31.7 39.6 Kenya 42 0 21 10.5 26.8 31.5 Madagascar 23 2.3 62 8.9 3.1 73.2 Malawi 42 0.4 21 1.4 34.5 22.8 Mozambique 18 0.6 22 14.8 44.8 37.4 Sierra Leone 41 1.4 36 2.4 18.8 40.1 Uganda 34 10 48 0.7 7.4 58.7 Zambia 30 0.6 39 11.4 19.8 51.0 Source:World Bank 2008b. small share graduate into wage employment.Those with connections may be lucky enough to obtain formal sector jobs, but they are a small minority. Women and rural workers follow the same transition path as men, but they begin at an earlier age and only rarely make the final transition to formal employ- ment. By age 9­14, rural residents are already abandoning school; most women leave school by age 15­19.Unpaid labor is the main sector of entry for these work- ers,with few inactive in the labor market (especially in rural areas) and even fewer unemployed. These workers leave the unpaid sector over time,primarily to become self-employed. Very few graduate into wage or formal sector employment. These transition paths are linked to social norms, local labor markets, and poverty. Women leave school early to start families and contribute to a new house- hold's survival rather than invest in their own future. Self-employment is easier to combine with household duties, and there is strong gender discrimination in for- mal wage jobs. Poverty and the abundance of land in rural areas makes continued employment costly to a young person's family, and learning-by-doing on farms may be a more valuable skill for young people than formal education.This leads to early school abandonment and early unpaid labor on family farms.The scarcity of paid labor in rural areas explains the low graduation rates into formal or wage jobs. Labor market inactivity rates are high among young people in Sierra Leone, especially for men and urban residents. Urban and rural adolescents have similar rates of inactivity in the labor market (13 percent). By 20­24 one in three urban TheTransition from School toWork 53 youth compared to one in six rural youth is inactive.While labor market inactiv- ity rates for young people in rural areas are similar to adult rates, urban youth and young adults have higher rates than urban adults. Almost one out of every four young or adult women is inactive in the labor market.Young males'inactivity rates are similar but significantly higher than for male adults,with only 1 out of 10 male adults inactive in the labor market. Truly inactive young men are not a serious problem in Sierra Leone:only 5­10 percent of young men who are inactive in the labor market have no intention of finding work.They report that there are no jobs available, so it is not even worth looking for work.They also complain that jobs are awarded based on connections rather than skill.One-quarter of all young men who are inactive in the labor mar- ket report dedicating their time to home duties, but only 9 percent of adult men say the same.This may be linked more to rural activities,where market and domes- tic work often overlap. The unemployment rate of less than 5 percent for all young people in Sierra Leone hides significant difference by gender and urban-rural location.Young peo- ple in urban areas are 25 times more likely to be unemployed than their rural coun- terparts.The unemployment rates in urban areas reach 17 percent for adolescents. Young men are almost twice as likely as young women to be unemployed . The low unemployment rates understate the extent of unemployment, because they fail to capture discouraged workers,high rates of inactivity in the labor market, and the quality of work.The levels of unpaid labor are very high in Sierra Leone, especially in rural areas where subsistence farming is the norm. One in five young people would like to work more hours, and the rate is slightly higher among men. Like adults,young people are concentrated in agricultural activities,in the infor- mal sector, and among the self-employed.Agricultural activities represent 70 per- cent of employment, with similar levels for young people and adults.The service sector is underpopulated by young people,while the retail industry employs them heavily. Formal sector employment increases with age but is very low across the life cycle, at 9 percent for the working-age population. Self-employment repre- sents more than half of all employment.The self-employed report the lack of other opportunities in the labor market as the main reason for becoming self-employed. Young people tend to have less promising employment opportunities than adults.Less than half receive payment for their labor,compared with two-thirds of adults, even though they are better educated than adults.They also have fewer opportunities for salaried employment and significantly fewer opportunities for formal employment than adults (public sector employment opportunities are mainly for people over 35).The desire to change jobs is highest among 25- to 35-year-olds. People who grew up during the conflict perform as well in the labor market as those who did not, and they reach employment levels that are similar to those for adults. People who were 25­35 in 2004 (the year of the survey)--and thus were teenagers during the conflict--are more integrated into labor markets than youth 20­24.They have similar levels of labor force participation,full-time employment, 54 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone and self-employment as adults.Male and urban young adults have lower labor force participation rates and higher inactivity in the labor market rates than adults from the same population group. Despite their limited access to wage and formal employment opportunities,young people who were teenagers during the conflict seem to be moving through the labor market in the same way as those who were not as directly affected by the conflict. Notes 1. These statistics differ slightly from those presented in chapter 2, because different data sources were used. Chapter 2 uses the 2004 Census data, which capture the entire pop- ulation of Sierra Leone; this chapter uses the 2004 Household Survey, which is a sample of the population.While the sample was designed to be nationally representative,it is likely not to have surveyed the most excluded or difficult-to-reach families.The numbers may be slightly biased, but the trends are the same as those generated by the census data. 2. The term inactive in the labor market is used rather than the term inactive, because many people who are not working or in school are active in other endeavors. 3. The truly inactive in the labor market are composed of two subgroups: discouraged workers and seasonal workers.Discouraged workers are defined as people who would like to work but do not think that there are any jobs for them so they do not even bother searching for a job. Seasonal workers have no intention of working in the offseason. 4. The unemployment rate is the share of the labor force that is searching for a job and not working (number searching/(number searching + number employed)).The share of the jobless who are unemployed is the share of the jobless that are searching for a job (number searching/number jobless). Although the unemployment rate is the com- monly used indicator of trouble in the labor market, recent research shows that unem- ployment and inactivity are similar states for young people (that is,young people move easily between unemployment and inactivity).This is partly a result of the vague dis- tinction between unemployment and inactivity (an individual is considered to be unemployed if he or she looked for a job for at least an hour the previous week and inactive if he or she did not).Joblessness,rather than unemployment,seems to be a more meaningful concept for young people. 5. A large percentage of young people cite"other"reasons for being jobless and not look- ing for work, especially for 20- to 24-year-olds, at more than 60 percent.The available information does not provide more details on what these reasons are.These people are not truly inactive in the labor market,because the survey allows for a"there are no jobs" response to "why are you not looking for a job?" 6. While only 1 percent of those with no education are unemployed, 4 percent of those with 1-9 years of education are in this situation,and more than 15 percent of those with 10-12 years of education are unsuccessfully searching for jobs.People with tertiary edu- cation have unemployment rates below 1 percent (author's calculations based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey). TheTransition from School toWork 55 7. The share of women who completely dedicate themselves to household work is very similar in urban and rural areas. 8. These figures were not disaggregated by age because of the small sample size in some of the work activities. 9. The R2 of a regression of log annual wages on education is 0.08, meaning that educa- tion explains only 8 percent of the variation in wages between different workers in the labor market.The other 92 percent of the variation in wages is caused by factors not related to education. 10. The sample size for grades 1-3, senior-secondary school, and higher education were too small to produce meaningful graphs. 11. Labor market distortions can be a major impediment to the creation of jobs, and they tend to disproportionately affect young people (Quinitni and Martin 2006).Across the world,unemployment rates among the young are often double or triple those of men 25­54 (World Bank 2006d).The causes of this are often postulated to be related to the relative size of the pool of incoming young people, the difficulty new labor market entrants have in signaling their qualifications for a particular job,and the burden of labor legislation that makes it costly to "try out" young workers and to fire them if they do not work out.The first two rationales--demographics and signals that new entrants can provide in a poor school system--could explain difficulties in labor market entry.The role of labor legislation is less clear. Given the low level of enforcement of labor laws and the empirical evidence that minimum wages laws are not followed, it is likely that the third rationale does not apply in Sierra Leone. 12. The low level of unemployment may reflect higher rates of unpaid labor in Sierra Leone relative to the rest of the region. 13. These data do not allow for cross-country comparisons of the type and quality of work, such as the levels of unpaid labor and formal employment opportunities,both of which are low in Sierra Leone. Labor Market Demand 4 M any programs designed to promote the employment and skill develop- ment of young people suffer from a mismatch between the skills these programs develop and the demands of the labor market.The result is limited success in easing the transition to the labor market and saturation in a few skill-specific markets.This chapter attempts to better understand the demand side of the labor market. Because no information was available on firm owners in Sierra Leone at the time this study was written,a survey was designed and conducted to collect infor- mation on labor demand.This chapter presents the results of the survey, as well as perceptions of young people and adults as expressed through the consultation process undertaken for this report. The survey found the following: · Limited job opportunities for young people are linked more to the overall lack of economic opportunities for business operation than to specificities associated with their age. · Farmers face labor market constraints,including the cost and shortage of labor. · Farm and business owners are more educated than the overall population. · Employers have more negative perceptions of people 18­24 than they do of adults. · Employers are biased against female employees. · Employers perceive the current skill level of their employees as low. · Both formal and informal employees would benefit from training. · The lack of resources and availability of training are the main constraints keeping employers from providing training. 57 58 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone The Employers Survey TheWorld Bank and Statistics Sierra Leone conducted a survey of enterprise own- ers to better understand the investment climate,hiring decisions,and employer needs of a representative group of firms and farms (appendix B.1 for a description of the survey).The survey was carried out in five districts:Western Urban,Western Rural, Bo, Bombali/Makeni, and Kailahun. The survey, called the Sierra Leone Employers Survey (SLES), included two complementary questionnaires: one for formal and informal businesses in urban areas (defined as settlements with at least 2,000 inhabitants) and one for farms in rural areas.1 To the extent possible, the analysis in this chapter differentiates firm types in the following way: · Formal and informal business in urban areas: Unregistered businesses are consid- ered informal.2 This is the same definition of formal and informal firms used by Statistics Sierra Leone and the Informality Survey implemented by the Foreign Investment Advisory Service (FIAS 2006). · Small, medium-size, and large business in urban areas: Small businesses have fewer than 10 employees, medium-size businesses have 10­49 employees, and large businesses have 50 employees or more. · Small, medium-size, and large farms: Small farms have fewer than 5 employees, medium-size farms have 5­10 employees, and large farms have more than 10 employees. All large businesses and farms and all medium-size firms were included in the sample frame (table 4.1).This reflects the structure of businesses in Sierra Leone, which has very few large enterprises and farms compared with other countries. The Business Environment Limited job opportunities for young people are linked to the overall lack of eco- nomic opportunities for business operation and development rather than to Table 4.1 Businesses and Farms Included in the Survey Sample Size/nature of enterprise Businesses Farms Small 502 163 Medium 136 143 Large 30 41 Informal 248 n.a. Formal 419 n.a. Total 668 347 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. n.a. Not applicable. Labor Market Demand 59 specificities associated with their age. Employers identified major constraints to the daily operation and potential growth of their business outside of the labor market, especially in urban areas. For daily operations the top three constraints employers face are domestic com- petition,weak demand for products,and inadequate access to electricity (table 4.2). Access to financing is especially limiting for small (formal and informal) businesses, while crime, theft, and disorder are considered the top constraints by owners of small informal businesses. Domestic competition and limited demand for products could be partially explained by the low purchasing power of most of the population.The level of equipment compared with domestic competitors does not seem to be a constraint: about 85 percent of employers perceive their equipment as the same as or better than that of their competitors, with small and informal businesses reporting lower levels.3 While inadequate access to water is not considered a top constraint by employers at medium-size and small firms, employers from large firms perceive it as a top constraint.Surprisingly,infrastructure is not rated a major problem,regard- less of size or formal status of business. For growth and expansion, inadequate access to financing is the top constraint for small and medium-size firms, followed by inadequate access to electricity. Limited access to financing is a key reason why small informal businesses believe Table 4.2 Top Constraints to Daily Operations and Growth, by Type of Firm Firm size Sector Constraint Large Medium Small Formal Informal Most important constraints to daily operations Domestic competition 1 2 1 1 1 Inadequate access to electricity 2 1 3 2 3 Weak demand for product 3 2 3 2 Inadequate access to water 3 Most important constraints to growth Inadequate access to financing 1 1 1 Inadequate access to electricity 3 2 2 1 2 Weak demand for product 3 2 Domestic competition 2 3 Cost of fuel 1 Inadequate access to advanced 3 technology Rent 3 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Table shows employers' ranking of top three constraints (appendix table B3.1 for more detailed results). 60 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone they cannot expand. Employers at larger firms also consider the cost of financing as one of the main constraints for business expansion,although it is more of a prob- lem for smaller firms. In addition to weak demand for their product and domestic competition, the costs of doing business (including rent and fuel) are top con- straints.The cost of fuel, often used for generators, is the top constraint for large businesses. Because of low and irregular access to electricity in Sierra Leone, most businesses rely on generators: about half of small businesses and 84 percent of medium-size and large firms own generators.The vast majority of business own- ers rent the building they use (63 percent of large and medium-size businesses and 83 percent of small businesses).The high cost of renting,especially for operators of smaller business,combined with limited access to financing,could restrict owners, particularly of small firms, from expanding their businesses, even if demand for their products were strong. Labor shortages are not a top constraint for employers. Only larger firms rank the lack of skilled labor as a top constraint for daily operation and potential growth of their business.As discussed in chapter 2,the education level is very low in Sierra Leone.Larger firms tend to hire more skilled labor.They are constrained as a result of the low supply.Across firm sizes, owners do not perceive the lack of availability of unskilled labor as a constraint. This finding is unsurprising, considering the abundant supply of low-skilled labor and the limited availability of paid employ- ment (chapter 3).Although not a top constraint, about a quarter of employers at large businesses rate labor and food costs for workers a major problem; employers at medium-size and small firms seldom perceive these as constraints. Restrictive labor regulations are not perceived as a constraint by employers. For farm owners the main constraints to daily operations are pests, inadequate access to financing, and inadequate access to equipment (table 4.3).Across farm sizes,pests are the top constraint to daily operations,followed by inadequate access to financing.While not among the top constraints, the cost of financing is per- ceived by 40 percent of farm owners as a major problem (the figure increases with the size of the farm). Regardless of size, inadequate access to both basic tools and equipment and advanced technology are top constraints for daily operation.About one-third of farmers perceive the level of their equipment as worse than their com- petitors.As with business owners,infrastructure is not a top constraint for farmers. However,about one-third of farm owners perceive poor access to roads and feeder roads as a major constraint,and 40 percent perceive the quality of existing roads as problematic. Land ownership is not an issue for farm owners. Farm owners face labor market constraints, including the cost and shortage of labor. Unlike urban businesspeople, farmers, especially owners of small farms, per- ceive the cost of labor as one of the top constraints to daily operations.The additional cost of providing food to workers, which the vast majority of agricultural employ- ers do, is another major constraint.Although shortages of skilled or unskilled labor are not among the top five constraints,about 20 percent of farmers perceive the lack of both skilled and unskilled labor as a major problem. (The lack of labor supply in rural areas, especially during peak seasons, is discussed below.) Labor Market Demand 61 Table 4.3 Top Constraints to Daily Operations and Growth, by Size of Farm Constraint All Large Medium Small Constraint to daily operation Pests 1 1 1 1 Inadequate access to financing 2 2 3 2 Cost of food for workers 3 3 2 3 Constraint to growth Inadequate access to financing 1 1 1 1 Cost of labor 2 3 Inadequate access to basic tools and equipment 2 3 2 Inadequate access to seeds 3 3 2 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Table shows farm owners' ranking of top three constraints (appendix table B3.2 for more detailed results). Inadequate access to financing, seeds, and basic tools and equipment are the main constraints for growth and expansion for farmers. Regardless of farm size, inadequate access to financing is the top constraint for farmers for expanding their farm.Employers of medium-size and large farms perceive inadequate access to basic tools and equipment as a top constraint; small farmers perceive inade- quate access to seeds and fertilizers as important constraints.The cost of labor is a constraint to potential growth and particularly to the daily operation of farms. Owners of larger farms cite family pressure as a major problem.This may reflect the high levels of unpaid work in rural areas (discussed in chapter 3) and the resulting pressure of hiring family members as paid employees on large farms producing cash crops.About half of farm owners rate access to storage facilities as a major problem, and more than one-third perceive access to support services as problematic. The lack of access to financing, one of the top constraints for all employers, is reflected in the very low use of formal credit. Personal savings and inheritance of a family business are the main sources of start-up capital for businesses and farms.Only about 4 percent of farmers and 6 percent of business owners used a formal loan in 2005­06, with higher percentages for larger and formal businesses (table 4.4). Informal loans were much more popular,with 12 percent of businesses using infor- mal loans in 2005/06 and 31 percent of farmers.The main sources of these loans are friends, relatives, and, in rural areas, osusus, a type of collective savings program.The top reasons cited for using informal loan mechanisms were easier procedures, lower interest rates, and lack of other sources of finance. Recent studies have highlighted the low level of financial services in Sierra Leone (World Bank 2006b;IFAD 2006).Most of the many small and medium-size 62 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table 4.4 Sources of Start-Up Capital and Use of Loans, by Size of Business or Farm (percent) Source/use of Size/status of business Size of farm start-up capital Large Medium Small Formal Informal All Large Medium Small Source of start-up capital Personal savings 57 80 82 76 88 81 83 82 80 Inherited family business 33 16 13 19 7 12 10 10 14 Informal loan 3 3 4 3 5 6 2 8 6 Formal loan 7 1 1 2 0 1 5 1 1 Use of loans Used formal loan since 2005 13 10 5 8 5 4 0 4 5 Used informal loan since 2005 3 7 13 10 14 31 24 36 28 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. enterprises in the country have very limited access to formal credit,and the banking system outside of Freetown is extremely limited (World Bank 2006b).The semifor- mal financial sector is made up largely of about 30 microfinance institutions (IFAD 2006).The informal sector comprises an unknown number of rotating savings asso- ciations (osusus), used mostly by traders and salary earners; daily deposit collection systems on markets (also called osusus), used by small traders; and money lenders. According to a study by the United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF, less than 2 percent of potential demand was satisfied by the financial sector in 2003 (IFAD 2006).In 2005,community banks and microfinance institutions satisfy about 11 percent of the most conservatively estimated potential demand (about 6 percent under a higher-demand scenario). Despite the many constraints employers face,they are generally optimistic about the future of their enterprises.The vast majority of employers expect both their business profits and their personal income to rise over the next two years.The smaller the business, the more optimistic the owner is about the future, with 95 percent of small business owners and 87 percent of large business owners expect- ing their profits to increase over the coming two years. Profile of Business and Farm Owners Business owners tend to be male adults with above-average levels of education (chapter 2).Thirty percent of business owners (and just 8.4 percent of the population Labor Market Demand 63 as a whole) completed senior-secondary high school; about 20 percent (and just 1.7 percent of the population as a whole) completed higher education (2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey).The education level of the business owner increases with firm size,with 56 percent of owners of large businesses and 44 per- cent of owners of medium-size business holding university degrees.As expected, education levels are higher among owners of formal businesses.While the self- employed have slightly less education than entrepreneurs,their education levels are still significantly higher than those of the overall population.Most owners are male, increasingly so with business size and formal status.Entrepreneurs 20­35 represent only one-quarter of business owners,with fewer young owners of larger firms than smaller firms. Only 9 percent of farm owners are under 35 (table 4.5). Focus group discus- sions reveal that lack of access to land and credit are major constraints to young people in rural areas, which may partially explain the low proportion of young farm owners (World Bank and ENCISS 2007).While the level of education of farm owners is higher than that of the average rural population, the differences are smaller than for businesses. Only 20 percent of farm owners have more than junior-secondary school education, and the majority have no or only Koranic education.About 13 percent of farms are owned by women, with the level similar Table 4.5 Profile of Business and Farm Owners (percent of category) Type of business Type of farm Small Self- Characteristic Large Medium entrepreneurs employed Formal Informal All Large Medium Small Younger than 35 11 11 27 34 25 27 9 5 11 8 Male 89 78 82 79 83 76 87 88 84 89 Educational level None 4 5 8 17 6 12 43 40 59 39 Koranic 0 4 19 20 13 17 15 13 16 14 Primary 0 7 6 8 5 8 12 8 14 12 Junior- secondary 4 7 11 13 8 14 12 10 11 14 Senior- secondary 20 16 35 29 31 28 10 15 4 14 Vocational 16 9 10 8 13 9 4 5 2 4 Teacher training 0 2 0 0 0 1 4 8 3 4 University 40 35 10 3 18 10 0.3 3 0 0 Postgraduate 16 9 1.6 0 5 1 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Numbers are rounded. 64 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table 4.6 Primary Reasons for Starting One's Own Enterprise (percent of category) Type of business Type of farm Reason Large Medium Small Formal Informal All Large Medium Small Best possible job 36 35 33 31 36 14 25 11 14 Expect to increase earnings over previous activity 27 10 10 11 10 17 15 14 20 No other job available 23 13 30 25 30 31 15 34 33 Continue a family business 5 13 10 12 9 24 22 29 20 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Numbers are rounded. across farm sizes.The stronger social capital of male adults relative to younger men and the fact that access to land passes along the male line in rural Sierra Leone may partly explain the landscape of farm ownership. Lack of other opportunities in the labor market is the main reason why employ- ers start their own business or farm: more than 60 percent of business owners and 44 percent of farm owners report that the main reason for starting their own enter- prise was the lack of other job opportunities or the fact that self-employment rep- resented the best opportunity available (table 4.6).About 15 percent of business owners of both enterprises and farms were unemployed before starting their busi- ness. In rural areas continuation of a family business is another primary reason for owning a farm.The expectation of a higher income is a driving force for owners of large firms and small farms. Sixty-five percent of farm and firm owners indi- cated that their income is higher than they expected when starting their business. Employers' Labor Demand The following section analyses the profile of workers hired by employers as well as employers'perceptions of potential employees,employers by age and gender,and their preferred hiring mechanisms. Finally, this sections analyses labor shortages in rural areas. Profile of the Labor Force in Businesses and Farms Employers hire mostly male employees. About 80 percent of all employees in the businesses surveyed are male, and the ratio of male employees to female Labor Market Demand 65 employees increases with business size.The majority of farm laborers are also male, although the ratio of male to female employees is lower than in the busi- ness sector (table 4.7). The focus group discussions confirm that women face greater constraints to employment than men, mainly because of their role as caregivers for their children and families and their lower literacy rates.Young women also face sexual harassment from employers (World Bank and ENCISS 2007).Females,especially young females, are less likely to have paid employment than males (as discussed in chapter 3). Firm owners tend to hire skilled production workers, while farmers generally hire unskilled workers.Among large firms,more than 69 percent of employees are skilled production workers.Informal businesses have more unskilled labor than for- mal businesses do.Farms rely more than firms on unskilled labor,and smaller farms use more unskilled labor than larger farms.The share of professionals is very low at firms (and almost zero on farms).4 Among smaller firms, young people are less likely to be employees in formal businesses or in firms with adult owners.5 Older and formal sector employers tend to hire older employees more frequently than younger or informal employers,con- trolling for the education level and gender of employer, sector, and region.While older firm owners and larger firms may value experience--and hence prefer older Table 4.7 Profile of Employees of Businesses and Farms (percent of category) Type of business Type of farm Characteristic Large Medium Small Formal Informal All Large Medium Small Male 85 78 79 82 80 63 62 61 69 Type of employee Management worker 6 10 12 8 9 4 5 4 5 Professional 5 13 5 8 6 0 0 1 0 Skilled production worker 61 37 47 52 41 44 54 41 35 Unskilled production worker 28 39 35 32 44 51 40 55 60 Full-time employee 97 93 85 94 91 70 72 77 54 Part-time employees 2 5 11 4 5 17 15 13 29 Temporary employee 2 2 4 2 4 13 13 10 17 Seasonal worker 63 40 30 35 31 86 95 83 85 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. 66 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone workers--more than other firms, focus group discussions also reveal that young people believe they have limited access to paid jobs as a result of fewer connections and employment-relevant social capital relative to elders (especially male owners). The education level of the firm owner does not affect the age of employees hired. Businesses in Kailahun have younger employees than business owners in Freetown (appendix table B2.1 for the regression specification and estimates). Employer Perceptions of Young Workers Employers have more negative perceptions of 18- to 24-year-olds than they do of adults.Employers perceive men and women 18­24 as being less reliable,less trust- worthy, less hard working, less cooperative, and less skilled than adults of the same gender. While in general female employers have similar perceptions as male employers,male employers are more likely to perceive that men 18­24 are less reli- able than male adults (86 percent compared with 75 percent);male employers also perceive women 18­24 as being less trustworthy than do female employers. Perceptions of these characteristics for men and women 25­35 are comparable to or more positive than they are for adults of the same gender. The focus group discussions reveal that adults find young people lacking the appropriate work ethic;they perceive young men in particular as lazy and unreliable. Especially for work opportunities in the formal sector,adults note that many young people have inappropriate work attitudes (failure to show up on time, inability or unwillingness to follow directions).In some focus group discussions,young women were perceived as being more prone to tardiness because of their domestic obliga- tions as mothers. In urban areas adults also mentioned the problem of alcoholism among young people. For their part, young people believe they are very willing to work, especially given opportunities (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). Physically challenged young people experience discrimination and are often accused by employers of causing trouble, limiting their employment opportuni- ties.The most frequent reason reported for not hiring a blind person is that the employer had never worked with the blind.Another obstacle is the fact that work places are not designed to be accessible to the physically challenged (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). Focus group discussions confirm that adults are perceived as more skilled than young people and men as more skilled than women,especially in urban areas.Focus group participants noted that young men often have higher literacy rates, because many families prefer to educate their sons over their daughters.Young women are sometimes forced into early marriage or give birth at an early age, which prevents them from pursuing or continuing their education.Women are,however,perceived as having greater skill in vegetable gardening and retail trading than men. In the informal sector,young men have opportunities for skills training (includ- ing in occupations such as carpentry,masonry,welding,and motor mechanics) that are not available to women.In some rural communities,young people are preferred for manual labor because they are perceived to be stronger and more energetic. Labor Market Demand 67 Employers are biased against females, and the bias increases with the age of the employee. About a quarter of employers perceive adult men as being more reli- able,trustworthy,and cooperative than female adult employees.More than 30 per- cent of employers perceive male adults as better skilled and 47 percent as harder working than women.The trends are similar but slightly lower for men and women 25­35. Perceptions of men and women 18­24 are mixed, with 21 percent of employers perceiving men as more skilled than women and 36 percent perceiving men as harder working than women. In contrast, female workers are considered slightly more reliable, trustworthy, and cooperative. Full-Time, Part-Time, and Seasonal Labor Farms have fewer full-time workers than firms and rely more on seasonal labor. About one-third of employees on farms are either part-time or temporary workers, while only 10 percent of workers in firms are not full-time employees,reflecting the higher fluctuation of labor demand in rural areas. Most farmers hire seasonal labor. While firms rely less on seasonal labor than farms,about one-third of firms hire sea- sonal workers, with more than 60 percent of larger enterprises using seasonal labor (see table 4.7).December is the main peak season for businesses,while seasonality for farms depends on the type of crops produced. Larger firms and businesses in Bo were the most dynamic in 2005.Larger firms were 74 percent more likely and medium-size firms 41 percent more likely than small firms to have hired new employees over the past year, controlling for other factors, including age, sex, education level of the owner, formal or informal type of business,sector,and region.Smaller firms may rely more on unpaid family work- ers when additional workers are needed.The service, health, and education sector were more dynamic than the trade sector. Controlling for sector, business size, region,and formal versus informal status,the level of education,age,and gender of the owner do not increase the likelihood of hiring new employees.Compared with Freetown, businesses in Bo were 11 percent more likely to have expanded their full-time labor force over the past year (appendix table B2.2 for the regression spec- ification and estimates). Hiring Methods Employers rely heavily on connections for hiring new employees,a practice that works against young people, who have weaker social connections than adults. Because friends and family are the main avenues for finding new employees, particularly agricultural workers and unskilled labor, young people are at a dis- advantage. Employers also rely on other employers and employees to find new workers.This reliance on connections is less pronounced for larger businesses, which use more formal channels, such as public placement offices and public announcements, especially for skilled laborers.Walk-ins are also a prominent way of finding new employees for all types of employers (table 4.8).Focus group 68 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table 4.8 Avenues for Hiring New Employees (percent of category) Type of business Type of farm Category Large Medium Small Formal Informal Large Medium Small Skilled employees Family 20 35 55 47 55 68 74 73 Friends 40 39 54 48 56 71 85 79 Public placement office 33 24 5 12 5 7 1 12 Public announcement 33 40 11 21 11 10 2 2 Other employers 13 22 16 18 15 34 20 4 Other employees 17 24 15 17 17 30 30 31 Walk-ins 47 27 16 20 18 37 38 41 Unskilled employees Family 13 43 62 53 63 81 86 86 Friends 37 54 57 53 62 88 92 90 Public placement office 30 18 3 9 3 4 0 1 Public announcement 23 22 6 12 7 7 1 3 Other employers 13 22 13 15 14 24 23 24 Other employees 30 28 16 20 18 30 34 44 Walk-ins 50 32 22 26 25 51 35 55 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Columns do not sum to 100 because employers may cite more than one response. discussions reveal that young people perceive that only people who are well connected (older people and relatives of contractors or government and NGO officials) can obtain paid employment, that connections are more important than merit (World Bank and ENCISS 2007). They complain that bribes are needed to gain formal employment. When young people respond to job announcements for formal employment opportunities, they sense that a candi- date has usually already been chosen. Labor Shortages in Rural Areas Agricultural producers' labor demand exceeds supply. More then 10 percent of farmers cannot find the workers needed to cultivate their farms.Most farmers hire additional workers during peak seasons,but about 9 percent cannot find the work- ers they need.This constraint is higher for small and medium-size farms than for larger farms (table 4.9). Labor Market Demand 69 Table 4.9 Demand for Labor by Agricultural Producers during Peak Seasons (percent of category) Farm size Ability to find seasonal labor Large Medium Small All Able to find workers needed for planting and land preparation 95 87 92 91 Able to find workers needed for general cultivation 90 86 90 88 Able to find workers needed for harvesting 98 90 92 91 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Young men are often preferred by agricultural employers, but there is a short- age of young men in rural areas, as discussed in chapter 2. Rural labor bottlenecks are attributed to urban migration, and it is likely that the current scarcity of labor for agriculture will increase in the future (World Bank 2005d).Young people who return to rural areas often lack the basic skills for agricultural development,because they did not grow up learning the skills from their families. The cost of labor is a major constraint for farmers.The cost of full-time employ- ees,both skilled and unskilled,is a major reason why small and medium-size farms do not employ more workers. Almost half of agricultural employers might hire more labor if the minimum required wage were lower (table 4.10). Low Skill Levels and the Dearth of Training Employers perceive the skill level of their employees as low.The skill shortage is most serious for agricultural employers, larger employers, and formal employers. Thirty percent of business employers perceive the current skill level of their skilled production workers as a problem, compared with 10 percent of small business employers,24 percent of medium-size business employers,and 44 percent of large agricultural producers. Business employers (but not agricultural employers) per- ceive a greater skills deficit for skilled employees (table 4.11). The lack of skills is higher for adults than for young people.Whereas agricul- tural producers perceive the skill level of adults and young people as similar, firm owners find the skill levels of adult employees, especially unskilled workers, lower than that of young people (table 4.11).Employers report that higher levels of edu- cation and more work experience among young people might lead them to hire more young people, but they also report that if adults were better trained, they would be more interested in hiring more of them. For example, 45 percent of medium-size businesses report that they would hire more young people if they 70 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table 4.10 Constraints to Hiring Agricultural Labor (percent of category) Farm size Constraint Large Medium Small All Cost of labor is a constraint to daily operation of farm 8 7 13 10 Cost of food for workers is a constraint to daily operation of farma 15 15 13 14 Cost of labor is a constraint to not hiring more full-time skilled labor 17 75 76 67 Cost of labor is a constraint to not hiring more full-time unskilled labor 8 61 80 60 Lower minimum wage required might lead to hiring more workers 18­24 51 44 49 47 Lower minimum wage required might lead to hiring more workers older than 24 51 37 50 45 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. a. Seventy-one percent of owners of small farms, 89 percent of owners of medium-size farms, and 85 percent of owners of large farms provide food to their workers. were better educated and 46 percent would hire more young people if they had better working experience, but 71 percent would hire workers older than age 24 if they were better trained. The very low levels of education in Sierra Leone may partly explain the high levels of the perceived skill deficit.The lack of basic education and skills may be rendering potential workers untrainable, creating a disincentive for employers to hire low-skilled labor. Most employers, especially at smaller businesses, provide no formal training to their employees.While skill levels of employees for all types of employers are per- ceived as low,only a minority of employers provides formal training,and those that do are almost exclusively larger and formal businesses or farms (table 4.12).Owners of large firms are 21 percent more likely and owners of medium-size firms 8 per- cent more likely to provide training than small firms, after controlling for educa- tion and age of business owner, formal or informal type of business, sector, and region. Business owners in Bo are 6 percent more likely to provide training than owners in Freetown,controlling for other firm and employer characteristics (appen- dix table B2.3 for the regression specification and estimates). For employers that provided training,the main benefits were perceived as increased productivity and improved quality of products or services.Only a minority of employ- ers perceived an increase in income for the business as a result of training. Few farm owners provide formal training to their employees.Medium-size and small farms almost never provide training. None of the younger farm owners Labor Market Demand 71 Table 4.11 Skill Levels of Current Employees (percent of category) Type of business Type of farm Factors Large Medium Small Formal Informal Large Medium Small Would hire more workers if People 18­24 were better educated 47 45 26 35 21 10 25 33 People 18­24 had better working experience 60 46 32 37 33 37 62 68 People older than 24 were better trained 74 71 49 57 50 42 69 62 Problem with skill level of current workers Skilled production workers 30 24 10 15 11 44 21 20 Unskilled production workers 27 21 6 11 7 42 21 32 Problem with skill level of workers under 24 Skilled production workers 28 16 9 11 11 44 23 18 Unskilled production workers 15 13 6 8 8 46 27 36 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. (10 percent of all farm owners) provided training to their workers. Larger farms are 35 percent and medium-size farms 9 percent more likely to provide training than smaller farms, controlling for other factors. Farmers with higher education are 22 percent more likely to provide training than farmers with no education. These employers tend to have larger farms that produce cash crops, which require higher skill levels than subsistence farming (appendix table B2.5 for the regression specification and estimates). The types of training from which employers would benefit are diverse. Employers from larger and formal businesses perceive the need for various types of training more than smaller businesses do. Marketing and management train- ing are in high demand for all types of businesses,with 41 percent of large,27 per- cent of medium-size, and 32 percent of small businesses owners perceiving the 72 Table 4.12 Training Needs and Benefits of Training, as Perceived by Employers (percent) Type of business Type of farm Training needs/benefits Large Medium Small Formal Informal Large Medium Small Training needs of employees Production technology (food processing for farms) 35 29 12 19 12 82 86 78 Marketing 41 27 32 30 34 56 68 58 Information technology 48 26 11 15 13 16 21 24 Management 52 37 21 25 25 58 36 41 Basic counting and arithmetic 35 16 16 18 15 47 42 43 Literacy 28 18 23 22 22 68 73 63 Safety 43 28 15 21 15 37 42 39 Accounting 31 34 19 23 19 37 27 22 Human resources 25 21 5 11 4 31 28 25 Communication skills 28 20 13 15 13 29 28 29 Exporting 10 8 8 9 6 18 23 28 Business development 18 25 24 25 22 61 49 47 Basic veterinary skills n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 28 34 33 Benefits for business Higher income 33 29 67 34 55 20 30 100 Higher productivity 92 71 83 88 73 80 80 100 Improved quality of products and services 58 89 92 82 82 90 70 100 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. n.a. Not applicable. Labor Market Demand 73 need for marketing training (table 4.12). Especially at larger firms, production technology, information technology, basic accounting, and safety training are prioritized. More than 80 percent of farm owners cite the need for training in food-processing technology, followed by literacy, business development, and management training. Lack of resources is the main constraint to providing formal training.Almost half of all businesses and two-thirds of agricultural producers did not provide for- mal training to their employees because of financial constraints (table 4.13). For agricultural producers, limited capacity to identify relevant training is a major constraint, with 58 percent not being able to identify the type of training that would be beneficial to them.The availability of competent trainers also seems limited. More than 40 percent of agricultural producers report that they cannot identify competent trainers or do not have access to external training institutions. Businesses employers perceive on-the-job experience as the best means of improving the skills of employees,while agricultural producers would rely more on formal training.For both skilled and unskilled workers,business employers perceive on-the-job experience as the best method to improve the skill level of their employ- ees. For unskilled workers, apprenticeships are another favored means, possibly because of low or no costs for the employer.Among training programs,urban firms identify government training courses as the most favored means,especially for infor- mal sector firms.Improving skills through on-the-job experience is perceived as one of the least favored methods by agricultural producers.These producers, especially large producers, prefer training provided by NGOs, followed by government train- ing, for both skilled and unskilled employees. Extension workers are a popular way to improve skills. Few employers perceive improvement of the education system as a means to improve the skill level of their employees. Willingness to pay for training increases with business size and the age of the employer. Employers at large firms are 38 percent more likely to be willing to pay for training, controlling for education and age of employer, size of firm, formal or informal, sector, and region. Employers under 35 are 8 percent less likely than older employers to pay for training. Employers in Bo are 33 percent more likely and employers in Kailahun 44 percent more likely to pay for train- ing than employers in Freetown.The limited availability of training in Kailahun compared with other regions may explain the increased willingness of employ- ers to pay for it.The level of education of the owner does not affect the will- ingness to pay for training (appendix table B2.4 for the regression specification and estimates). Willingness to pay for training increases with farm size. Large farms are 25 percent more likely and medium-size farms 15 percent more likely than small farms to pay for training, controlling for age, gender and education level of employer, and region.The education level of the employer does not affect the willingness to pay. Employers in Kailahun are 26 percent more willing to pay for training compared with other regions (appendix table B2.6 for the regression specification and estimates). 74 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table 4.13 Employers' Explanations of Why They Do Not Offer Training and How Employee Skills Could Best Be Improved (percent of category) Reason for not offering training/ best means of Type of business Type of farm improving skills Large Medium Small Formal Informal Large Medium Small Reason for not offering training No need for additional training of skilled workers 50 35 19 25 20 3 10 14 Cannot afford formal internal or external training 44 34 51 42 58 65 71 65 No need for training of unskilled worker 25 34 22 27 20 0 11 11 No time available for training 13 20 29 25 29 7 14 25 Staff may leave for other job if they are trained 13 29 13 19 10 3 12 15 Cannot identify competent trainers for internal training 13 13 12 13 12 28 50 42 No external training institutions 6 12 10 10 11 47 47 36 Do not know what kind of training would be helpful 0 5 18 13 18 39 64 56 Best means of improving skills Skilled workers (including skilled extension workers) Government training 7 15 24 18 26 27 40 40 (continued) Labor Market Demand 75 Table 4.13 (Continued) Reason for not offering training/ best means of Type of business Type of farm improving skills Large Medium Small Formal Informal Large Medium Small Private sector training 21 25 22 25 20 0 7 15 NGO training 14 14 15 12 20 51 34 24 Apprenticeships 3 9 9 9 9 3 2 3 On-the-job experience 38 28 19 23 18 8 13 14 Improved education system 10 7 4 5 5 5 0 0 Extension workers 7 2 8 9 3 5 5 3 Unskilled workers (including unskilled extension workers) Government training 0 6 5 5 4 12 27 27 Private sector training 7 11 6 9 5 10 4 8 NGO training courses 3 5 12 7 15 39 23 12 Apprenticeships 24 23 22 23 21 7 17 27 On-the-job experience 41 45 41 39 49 7 12 15 Improved education system 7 4 5 5 3 2 1 1 Extension workers 17 7 9 12 4 17 17 11 Source: 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: More than one answer is possible in survey responses. Conclusions Limited labor market opportunities for young people are linked more to the over- all challenging economic situation in Sierra Leone than to specificities associated with their age.Economic growth is hampered by,among other things,limited pri- vate sector development, weak local purchasing power, and inadequate infra- structure. Improved economic growth is a priority for increasing employment opportunities for both young people and adults. Employers identify domestic competition, weak demand for products, and inadequate access to electricity and 76 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone financing as major constraints for business development.They do not perceive labor regulations as a constraint. Farm owners face labor market constraints, including the cost and availability of labor. Unlike urban firms, the cost of labor is perceived as one of the top con- straints faced by agricultural producers, especially small producers. More than 10 percent of farmers cannot find the workers they need for the general cultiva- tion of their farms or the additional workers they need during peak seasons.Young men are often preferred as hired labor by agricultural employers, but there is a shortage of young men in rural areas as a result of urban migration. Not all young people are cut out to be successful entrepreneurs or self-employed. The education levels of current entrepreneurs and the self-employed are signifi- cantly higher than for the overall population.The level of education of a business owner increases with the size of the business. Patterns for farm owners are similar, although the differences in skill levels are significantly lower. Employers have more negative perceptions of people 18­24 than they do of adults.They perceive men and women 18­24 as being less reliable,less trustworthy, less hard working, less cooperative, and less skilled than adults of the same gender. Employers view skill strengthening of employees as central to increasing pro- ductivity and product quality. About one-third of farmers and one-sixth of business employers perceive the skill level of employees as problematic.The skill shortage is more serious at larger firms and farms and at formal enterprises. Marketing and management training are in high demand by all type of businesses. Especially at larger firms,production technology,information technology,basic accounting,and safety training are priorities.Among agricultural producers, four out of five farm- ers prioritize food-processing technology,followed by literacy,marketing,and basic veterinary skills. Lack of resources is the main reason why employers do not pro- vide formal training.Willingness to pay for training increases with the size of the business or farm. Farmers need support to identify the relevant training for their employees as well as who could provide the required training. Notes 1. The two surveys were as similar as possible. Some questions were added to the rural survey to reflect issues specific to agricultural production. 2. Businesses can be registered with the Administrator and Registrar General's Office, the National Social Security and Insurance Fund (NASSIT), the National Revenue Authority (NRA),the Ministry ofTrade,the Ministry of Labor,the LicensingAuthority, or other authorities (such as the Local Council and the Pharmacy Board). 3. In contrast, 28 percent of all farmers perceive their equipment as worse than their competitors (12 percent among owners of large farms, 28 percent among owners of medium-size firms, and 29 percent among owners of small farms). 4. Professionals are defined as people who require a university degree or equivalent tech- nical degree;skilled workers are defined as those with some level of secondary education Labor Market Demand 77 who can perform tasks "the average person on the street cannot perform." Unskilled workers are defined as people "performing jobs that anyone taken off from the street could learn within a day."They include service workers, such as cleaners and guards (2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey). 5. For each business,a maximum of 10 employees was interviewed.The regression is lim- ited to small firms that included information on all employees.For large and medium- size firms, a subset of employers was interviewed. International Experience withYouth Programs and 5 Lessons for Sierra Leone O ne of the most important challenges for Sierra Leone is integrating a gen- eration of young people into the economy, and through this, promoting continuous peaceful development.Continuous recovery of the economy, an improved investment climate, and increased development of the private sector are essential to improving employment opportunities for young people and adults in Sierra Leone. Policies and programs to facilitate the transition to work are also necessary.When young people in Sierra Leone are asked for solutions to un- and underemployment, skills training and access to financing for self-employment are among the interventions invariably proposed. Unfortunately, the gap between the programs and policies that are needed and those that are in place remains wide. Where skills training exists, it is often hampered by the lack of appropriate equip- ment, outdated curricula and instructional material, and a general lack of respon- siveness to the needs of the marketplace (National Research Council 2005). For its part, financing for new business start-ups--a critical need, according to survey respondents--is in short supply. This chapter reviews the experiences of youth programming from countries across the world,with special attention to those with large cohorts of out-of-school and unemployed young people.The review draws from an inventory of 289 youth programs worldwide assembled by theWorld Bank (Betcherman and others 2007). It also looks at the experience of youth programs in Sierra Leone. Forces Shaping the Employment of Young People The policy and institutional forces shaping the employment of young people world- wide begin with the flow into early schooling and continue into the world of work.1 (These transitions, and others, are highlighted in chapters 2 and 3.) Early schooling is shaped by demographic, social, and economic forces influencing the availability and quality of schooling.Rapid population expansion against a background of slow 79 80 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone economic growth can limit educational opportunities and reduce the quality of education.The ability to take advantage of educational opportunities is in turn a function of a student's preparation and motivation for schooling, as determined by experiences at home and in the community. Poor nutrition, health care, and opportunities for childhood development--all potential consequences of poverty--can combine to diminish learning outcomes from education and readi- ness for entry to the world of work. In the passage from education to the labor market,outcomes can be affected by early work experience, labor policies, and labor market programs that enhance labor supply and demand.The nature of early work experiences influences the transition from school to work,particularly in building skills and creating pathways for career advancement. Apprenticeship has long been a means for transferring skills on the job and opening up employment opportunities. Models of formal apprenticeship in high-income countries under the direction of employers and labor organizations are joined in many developing countries by traditional appren- ticeships with master craftspeople in the informal economy (Johanson and Adams 2004).Newer models integrating early work experience in the school curriculum are emerging in the countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD),as are efforts to extend apprenticeships beyond traditional skilled and craft occupations (Adams 2007). Many of these opportunities were unavailable in Sierra Leone during the conflict. Labor market policies establish national norms of behavior for employers and workers.These policies extend to wage and nonwage benefits, hiring and firing provisions,health and safety measures,antidiscrimination provisions,rules for labor organization and collective bargaining, among other issues. Policies intended to protect workers by setting minimum wages, providing job security, and promising high levels of nonwage benefits may protect some workers,but they often do so at the expense of others,whose productivity is not high enough to pay for these ben- efits.2 Policies intended to benefit workers at large may have the opposite effect on young people. Restrictions on hiring and firing of workers, for example, can dis- courage the hiring of untested new entrants to the labor force. Two types of labor market program exist:active and passive.On the supply side, active programs offer job counseling and search assistance, targeted remedial edu- cation,and nonformal training;on the demand side,they create jobs through pub- lic works, targeted wage subsidies, and support for self-employment. Passive programs provide income protection for people who lose their jobs. The services and level of benefits of both sets of programs vary across coun- tries.3 Among active programs, remedial education and nonformal training offer second-chance options for young would-be workers who are unsuccessful in obtaining skills for the workplace through formal schooling. Labor market pro- grams also help those who were successful in building this foundation to obtain additional training and skills to advance their employment.Labor market programs and youth-friendly labor policies join early work experience and formal educa- tion and training to shape the transition of young people to work. International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 81 Where armed conflict exists or existed in the recent past,the development path for young people will likely reflect the fact that early childhood development and schooling were disrupted.Young people may approach the normal age of employ- ment without the skills needed, because education and training were unavailable. Children may be trapped in conflict as soldiers or forced with their families to flee their communities and any social services they might have provided. Alongside the lack of readiness for employment, the climate for investment and job creation is disrupted by conflict.Few jobs are available,and many people are left without ade- quate means of income support, forced to depend on the informal economy and income transfers. Restoring opportunities for employment in a postconflict set- ting poses a challenge for policy makers,as does preparing young people to become productive citizens and providers for their families. Lessons from theYouth Employment Inventory TheYouth Employment Inventory (YEI) is a World Bank inventory of 289 pro- grams and interventions from 84 countries designed to integrate young people into the labor market.4 The inventory offers a comprehensive sample of interventions that have been evaluated as well as descriptions of and basic information on pro- grams that have not.The inventory is not confined to success stories; on the prin- ciple that there is a great deal to be learned from mistakes and failures,unsuccessful stories are also included. The inventory holds potential lessons for Sierra Leone.It pays special attention to the employment problems of disadvantaged young people, rather than those who are simply unemployed.5 Documented programs include interventions to increase the demand for labor as well as to improve the employability profile of young people so that they can take advantage of opportunities when demand for labor increases (Betcherman and others 2007). Based on these premises and the programs' primary purpose, the inventory identified the following categories of interventions applying to Sub-Saharan Africa: · Opening pathways to jobs · Improving chances for young entrepreneurs · Improving the skills profile for employment · Making training systems work better · Improving labor market regulations in ways that benefit young people · Comprehensive interventions, including education equivalency programs, training, counseling, job search assistance, and other services. Most programs covered by the inventory were implemented in high- and middle- income countries; only a small share come from low-income regions.The com- position of active labor market measures varies by income level. OECD countries tend to have a diverse portfolio of programs, with multiple-service and training programs as the most popular;middle-income countries are highly oriented toward 82 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone training interventions.In low-income countries,more attention is given to making training systems work better and improving chances for young entrepreneurs.This pattern is most relevant to Sierra Leone.The inventory also documents programs in postconflict countries and low-income countries under stress (LICUS).6 Two-thirds of interventions in these countries involve vocational training, apprenticeship sys- tems, and training-related programs. The inventory reveals the dearth of impact evaluations of employment pro- grams (Dar and Tzannatos 1999; Betcherman and others 2004). Drawing con- clusions based on rigorous evaluations of the impact of programs for young people is difficult, because only one-quarter of documented interventions included impact evaluations that used treatment and control groups to measure the net gains of the programs on employability, earnings, or both. Even where evaluations were conducted, few (10 percent of the whole inventory) calculated costs and provide estimates of cost-effectiveness.The evaluation gap is prominent in South Asia, East Asia and the Pacific, the Middle East and North Africa, and Sub-Saharan Africa. Among programs that were rigorously evaluated with treatment and control groups, the impacts in OECD countries were disappointing; in the much smaller number of developing countries and transition economies with rigorous evaluations, the program impacts were more promising.7 Constraining the sample to programs with net impact evaluation--73 out of 289 interventions--60 percent of "evaluated" programs had a positive impact in the labor market, but only 15 percent were cost- effective.This finding has to be interpreted with caution given the small number of programs evaluated in developing countries and transition economies.It never- theless suggests that the challenges posed in developing countries can be met with effective programs. Lessons learned are limited to programs with net impact eval- uations, unless otherwise mentioned (table 5.1). Opening Pathways to Jobs Programs that open pathways to employment are often important in settings in which job growth in the formal economy is limited.Low-cost job search assistance and counseling--both popular in high-income countries--may not be as effective in developing countries,and wage subsidies are not likely to have an impact in set- tings in which few people earn wages. Creating jobs through public works offers an alternative pathway to employment in Sierra Leone, where investments in infrastructure will continue to be important in the near future.Public work programs provide good opportunities for young peo- ple,especially those with low skills,to acquire initial work experience.The inventory suggests that targeting is important to minimize displacement effects for other labor market groups and to control costs.Programs providing skills training alongside tem- porary income support are potentially more effective at increasing employability beyond the temporary work opportunities provided through public work programs. The Agence d'Exécution desTravaux d'Intérêt Public contre le Sous-Emploi (AGETIP) programs in Sub-Saharan Africa have stimulated small business International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 83 Table 5.1 Impacts and Outcomes of Various Types of Employment Programs forYoung People Impacts and outcomes Type of program Developed countries Developing countries Opening pathways to jobs Wage subsidies · In developed countries, wage subsidies are · Mixed outcomes · Impact in most effective when they target poor for young people, developing countries people with low levels of education increasing employ- in which job rather than unemployed people in general. ment rates, job creation is very weak · It is key to target firms and sectors with duration, and remains to be tested. the potential to create human capital earnings in some · Have improved accumulation among young people. cases employment · Targeting is important to minimize outcomes in displacement effects and control costs. transition economies,where young women and participants with low levels of education tend to benefit most. Public work programs · Provide opportunities to acquire initial · Mixed results · Mixed results. work experience, especially for low- Positive outcomes skilled and rural young people. indicate higher · More successful when providing skills employment training at the same time as temporary probability, but work. cost-effectiveness · Successful programs such as AGETIP remains to be (see below) combined technical support tested. to microenterprises, including marketing, · Not clear if accounting, financial management, and programs lead to access to credit. improved chances · Targeting is important to minimize of participants for displacement effects and control costs. future employment · Governance may be an issue. Public works opportunities. projects require transparency and oversight to ensure that projects target the poor, inexperienced young people are trained, and only worthy projects are funded. Improving chances for young entrepreneurs · Popular option in low-income countries · No evaluation · Evidence for in which job growth in formal evidence in developing economy is low. OECD countries countries (continued) 84 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table 5.1 (Continued) Impacts and outcomes Type of program Developed countries Developing countries · Programs should address constraints is still very limited specific to young people, such as lack of but promising. networks, experience, and collateral. No evidence on · Not all young people are suited for long-term effects. self-employment. Careful targeting and · Failure rates can be screening is key for success, low dropout high if programs rates, and cost-effectiveness. are not well · Effective programs often use screening designed. mechanisms, such as preparation of a · Limited evidence business plan, to identify motivated and from transition creditworthy participants. economies shows · Other key determinants of success include positive effects on access to credit, business-related training, employment and and high-frequency counseling visits. cost-effectiveness. · NGOs play an important role in the delivery of these programs and tend to be more effective than government. · Lack of success/failure indicators (that is, information systems and long-term evaluation evidence) may lead to budget cuts, hindering programs' sustainability. Improving the skills profile for employment · Successful training systems include · Cross-country · Limited but public-private alliances in the design and evaluations in promising provision of services, creating cost- OECD countries evidence sharing structures, and allowing suggest non- of positive impact, consistency between courses and skills significant labor especially in demanded by the market. market impacts, transition · Training providers usually need to be but cost­benefit economies. strengthened. analyses show net · Cost­benefit · Involvement of the private sector losses. analyses show promotes on-the-job training. mixed results. · Promising programs include sanction schemes to reduce the probability of dropping out, such as reimbursement of the cost of training by students who drop out. · The private sector and NGOs tend to be more effective than the government in program delivery. (continued) International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 85 Table 5.1 (Continued) Impacts and outcomes Type of program Developed countries Developing countries Formal apprenticeship programs · Successful · Unproven. May not be relevant for developing countries, where the share of employment in the modern wage sector is low Traditional apprenticeship programs · Programs cater to individuals who lack · Not carefully the educational requirements for formal evaluated but training. promising and · Benefits of this approach include practical possibly orientation, self-regulation, and cost-effective self-financing. · Risks include favoring young men, perpetuating traditional technologies, and failing to establish standards and ensure quality. · Successful programs include improving literacy and basic education of apprentices, opening access to new technologies, improving pedagogical and technical skills of master craftspeople, and certifying skills. Comprehensive interventions · Demand-driven approach, private sector · Evidence from · Comprehensive participation, competition among training OECD countries programs report providers, and quality and relevance of suggests mixed positive outcomes training are key to ensure success and results. on employment sustainability. and earnings. · High costs may defer net gains and · High cost of hinder sustainability. programs may be · Strengthening institutional coordination deterrent in and the ability to manage multiservice resource- programs may play an important role in constrained reducing operating costs. environments. Sources: Betcherman and others 2007; Puerto 2007;World Bank 2006c. 86 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Box 5.1 Creating Jobs and Building Infrastructure in Senegal AGETIP-Senegal works with a roster of about 300 consulting engi- neers and 2,000 small contractors, many of which were not contractors in 1988, when the program began.The agency created some 450,000 temporary jobs. By 2003 program-funded contractors had rehabilitated 325 kilometers of urban roads, paved more than 200 kilometers of roads, cleaned 565 kilometers of drainage canals, installed 500 kilome- ters of water pipes, fixed 220 kilometers of public lightings, installed 300 standpipes, and built more than 170 commercial buildings, 5,300 classrooms, and 400 health posts. Source: Wade 2004. development and job growth for both young people and adults.The program combines public works with jobs and training for young people who are unem- ployed. Construction firms receiving contracts agree to use relatively labor- intensive practices to employ local inexperienced young people, who receive training funded by AGETIP. Program participants are hired on a temporary basis, but the training and work experience are important assets in finding more permanent employment (World Bank 2006c). Begun in Senegal and replicated in some 15 mostly French-speaking countries in the region,AGETIP was able to package public works into small contracts that could be bid on and delivered by small contractors (box 5.1). It was able to create new businesses and jobs while delivering needed public works in a competitive manner. Contributing to its success was its technical support to microenterprises, including market- ing, accounting, financial management, and the access it provided to credit. Programs of this nature require transparency and close oversight to avoid cor- ruption and ensure that projects are targeted to the poor and that inexperienced young people are trained (World Bank 2006c). Sierra Leone will be investing in public infrastructure as it recovers. Adopting the AGETIP approach could help create jobs and spur small business development. Improving Chances forYoung Entrepreneurs Improving chances for young entrepreneurs is a popular option in low-income countries, where job growth in the formal economy tends to be slow. The evi- dence indicates, however, that not everyone is suited to self-employment and that failure rates are often high.As discussed in chapter 4, entrepreneurs and the self- employed have considerably higher skill levels than the population as a whole. In addition to a minimum skill level, self-employment also requires business savvy, a skill that is difficult to acquire. Careful targeting and screening for these programs International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 87 will be important to success and cost-effectiveness. Promising programs often use screening measures, such as the preparation of a business plan, as a tool to identify motivated and creditworthy participants. Program design should include business- related training,technical assistance,frequent counseling visits,and access to credit.8 Program delivery should be handled by NGOs, which tend to be more effective than government.Training programs for young entrepreneurs should follow a clear set of objectives to achieve the greatest impact (box 5.2). Box 5.2 Setting Goals for Training Future Entrepreneurs Training for self-employment in microenterprises requires major changes for most training providers, particularly with regard to the following areas: · Labor market linkages.Trades selected for training need to be based on analysis of the local labor market.They will probably differ across geo- graphic areas.Trainers need to be selected for their special competencies. · Training content. Practical business skills need to be taught and training for examinations and official certificates deemphasized. Short modular courses can be introduced.Technical training needs to go beyond the standard trades to avoid market saturation. · Training delivery. Training has to be short, entry requirements flexible, and training hours and venues convenient for trainees.The focus should be on taking training programs out to the target audiences instead of providing training at fixed centers. · Training materials. Most training materials still need to be developed. They should be designed so that poorly educated trainees can follow them. · Certification. Certification should be based on demonstrable competency. · Training followup. Early attention should be given to complementary services needed to succeed as a self-employed person (for example, credit, marketing, and business counseling) (Haan 2001). · Income-generating activities. Technical skills may not be in demand, but income-generating activities cannot be promoted effectively without addressing a "technical" side to transfer practical knowledge about production techniques, raw materials, tools and equipment, and prod- uct design.This requires activities such as: ­ Precredit technical orientation. Advise prospective borrowers on promis- ing economic activities, relevant technologies, the types of tools and equipment to buy, and other practical issues. ­ Demonstrations. Give short demonstrations to introduce nontradi- tional production techniques and product designs. 88 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone ­ Skills transfer. Offer short training sessions on skills transfer and the technical aspects of income-generating activities. ­ Business counseling. Pay frequent visits to borrowers who have started up new businesses to help them deal with minor administrative and technical problems. Source: Johanson and Adams 2004. Improving the Skills Profile for Employment Formal training programs, apprenticeships, and second-chance opportunities are often used to equip the unemployed, particularly young people, with the skills demanded by the market.Success rates vary,often as a function of a program's abil- ity to identify the skills the market demands. TRAINING PROGRAMS. Training programs have not proved very successful in pro- moting employment of young people.9 Target groups range from disadvantaged young people to the long-term un- and underemployed, to job seekers in urban and rural areas. An overview of several cross-country evaluations of active labor market programs in the OECD shows negative or only modestly positive (and often statistically insignificant) treatment effects for training (Kluve 2006). In the United States, two meta-analyses of youth employment programs implemented since 1962 find only very modest gains for young workers (Gay and Borus 1980; Greenberg, Michalopoulos, and Robins 2003). In developing countries, a major problem with training programs is that they often fail to meet market needs,result- ing in saturation of the labor market with popular skills among training providers, such as carpentry, soap making, or tailoring. Training programs can be successful if they involve the private sector in pro- viding practical work experience and identify the kind of skills required by the market. Some training programs are provided directly by the government; others include private sector participation,fostering competition among training institu- tions. Demand-driven models have been implemented to create training courses that are consistent with the skills required by the market.Engaging the private sec- tor in training is an effective way to mitigate the risk of high-cost training that is disconnected from market demand. Training programs are among the most costly of interventions for young people. For this reason,connecting training with jobs is important to cost-effective success. (For an example of a successful program increasing the employability of disadvan- taged young people through training and participation of the private sector, see the description of the Entra 21 Program in appendix C). ON-THE-JOB TRAINING AND APPRENTICESHIPS. Not all skills are developed in the classroom.On-the-job training and traditional apprenticeships can be cost-effective International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 89 alternatives, especially for lower-skilled occupations. Private enterprises are an important source of training throughout Sub-Saharan Africa (Johanson and Adams 2004).On-the-job training is one of the most effective approaches for skill strength- ening. It also avoids the common pitfall of providing training for skills for which demand is weak or nonexistent. Increasing the productivity of existing formal and informal businesses through worker training can lead to additional employment creation.As discussed in chap- ter 4, about one-third of farmers and one-sixth of employers perceive the current skill level of their employees as problematic and would benefit from training. Throughout West Africa, traditional apprenticeships are a popular source of non-classroom-based skills development.In fact,it is not unusual to find more appren- tices than wage employees in informal sector firms (Haan and Serrier 2002).In Ghana, 80­90 percent of all basic skills training comes from traditional apprenticeships. The main strengths of traditional apprenticeship are its practical orientation, self-regulation, and self-financing.These apprenticeships cater to individuals who lack the educational requirements for formal training (the circumstance of many young people in Sierra Leone), reach important target groups (rural populations and the urban poor),and are generally cost-effective.There are some disadvantages as well:traditional apprenticeship is biased in favor of young men,screens out appli- cants from the poorest households, perpetuates traditional technologies, and lacks standards and quality assurance (Johanson and Adams 2004). In many environ- ments, traditional apprenticeship has served the informal sector well, but it is too narrowly focused to cope with the increasing challenges of technological change, skills upgrading, and expanding markets (Ziderman 2003). There are ways to strengthen this important source of skills development in Sierra Leone. Steps include improving literacy and basic education to promote trainability and adaptability of apprentices and master craftspeople. Literacy and nonformal education programs can promote trainability,as can facilitated access to new technologies for master craftspeople and efforts to improve their pedagogical and technical skills. A promising approach to promoting competition between pri- vate and public suppliers of traditional skills training is vouchers (box 5.3).The vouchers used in Kenya's Jua Kali program helped master craftspeople access new technologies and improved their pedagogical skills, improving the training they offered apprentices. Such programs should be administered through the private sector and implemented on a small scale in order to remain manageable (for a detailed description of the program, see appendix C). Quality issues can be addressed by linking traditional apprenticeships with formal standards established within a quality assurance framework and by certifying skills attained as a bench- mark for quality and portability (Johanson and Adams 2004). SECOND-CHANCE OPPORTUNITIES. Nonformal education programs that bring school dropouts up to an academic level equivalent to that missed in formal edu- cation could be especially important in a postconflict country, where young peo- ple missed educational opportunities.The evidence in theYEI for these programs, 90 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone most of it from high-income countries, is mixed.There are few evaluations of equivalency programs by themselves.Those that are available suggest a positive effect of later access to further education and training opportunities for the disad- vantaged.When equivalency programs are combined with other services as part of Box 5.3 Improving Traditional Apprenticeship Training in Kenya through Competition The Kenyan NGO Strengthening InformalTraining and Enterprise (SITE) ran the Jua Kali project from 1996 to 1998 to improve traditional appren- ticeship training.The objectives were to upgrade the technical and manage- rial skills of master craftspeople, enable them to diversify their production, strengthen their capacity to provide quality training to apprentices, and improve the capacity of selected vocational training institutes to provide ongoing training to master craftspeople.Vouchers are issued to unemployed young people, who select their own training provider based on their needs and objectives. The main lessons from this intervention included the following: 1. Master craftspeople are not immediately interested in receiving skills training and need to be "hooked."Training has to be put in the broader context of business improvement and the transfer of mar- ketable skills into tangible gains.Training has to be delivered in a flex- ible manner, taking into account the opportunity cost of the labor and the time of participants. 2. Master craftspeople seek training not mainly to increase fees for tradi- tional apprenticeships but to increase income from productive aspects of their businesses. 3. Training interventions proved a useful entry point for upgrading the technology of small and medium-size enterprises. 4. Linkages with vocational training institutes proved disappointing-- they did not become sustainable providers of training to Jua Kali. 5. Independent trainers could be promoted as training providers to the informal sector.This is probably a more sustainable approach than working through vocational training institutes, which, as now structured, appear to have little potential for promoting employ- ment in the informal sector. 6. Collaboration with informal sector associations is of prime importance. 7. Upgrading informal sector enterprises is possible through well-targeted skills development. Source: Haan 2001. International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 91 comprehensive programs,there is ample evidence that these combined services can yield positive cost-benefit ratios.Evidence of this is found in the United States and Latin America, albeit at costs that far exceed the capacity of most low-income countries. Described as second-chance programs, these comprehensive programs work, but their high cost highlights the importance of getting the first chance for education right. To limit the fiscal burden of second-chance initiatives, programs must be well targeted, designed to increase skills, and geared to the needs of the labor market. Young people in need of a second chance are usually vulnerable in multiple ways and have diverse needs. Some countries try to get such people back in school or provide alternative mechanisms for skills development. Others attempt to reinte- grate them into the workforce. For young people who are out of school, equiva- lence, literacy, and job training programs should be designed to provide the skills needed for work.The use of practical curricula that include both technical and life skills,flexible schedules,and less formal instruction methods is likely to attract them and provide them with the skills most needed in the labor market (Garcia and Fares 2006). Comprehensive Interventions Programs with comprehensive interventions, including education equivalency, training, counseling, job search assistance, and other services, are among the more successful, albeit expensive, approaches for improving the employability of disad- vantaged young people.Multiservice programs are common in Latin America and the United States.The Jóvenes programs, implemented in Latin America, have been widely cited as successful (Betcherman and others 2007) (appendix C).10The program's demand-driven model targets economically disadvantaged young peo- ple, fosters private sector participation in training provision and internships, and promotes competition among training providers. Comprehensive programs have also shown success in Sub-Saharan Africa (box 5.4).Although successful in improving job placement and earnings, the programs became too expensive for some countries and were replaced by smaller, more focused interventions. Lessons from Sierra Leone Sierra Leone has made a remarkable recovery after a decade of conflict, but it still faces major challenges to peaceful development.The country has witnessed an unprecedented surge in student enrollment, as well as major efforts to rehabilitate and reconstruct schools that were destroyed,damaged,or abandoned.11 In addition to expansion of general education, enrollment in technical and vocational educa- tion and training (TVET) has expanded rapidly, with more than 31,000 students enrolled in these programs. 92 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Box 5.4 Uganda's Program for the Promotion of Children andYouth The Program for the Promotion of Children andYouth (PCY) is a Ugandan-German intervention to support children and young people in difficult circumstances.The program, implemented in Uganda between 2003 and 2006, adopted a comprehensive approach to un- or underem- ployed disadvantaged rural residents. Comprehensive services encom- passed promotion of social networking; information and counseling; entrepreneurship and self-employment activities; and life skills, reproduc- tive health, and HIV/AIDS prevention. PCY also provided interventions in conflict areas and displaced persons camps. An initial impact evaluation in 2003/04 showed that incomes of par- ticipants were about 26 percent higher than those of other community members. Furthermore, the main sources of program participants' income was salaries (23 percent) and group activities involving young people (38.5 percent). In contrast, nonparticipants were still engaged mainly in subsis- tence farming (76 percent). Preliminary results of the ongoing impact eval- uation suggest that PCY has a positive cost-benefit ratio. PCY also strengthened the institutional capacity of government workers (labor officers, community development workers, and public sec- tor workers) and other stakeholders regarding policy toward young peo- ple in general. It also improved tools and methods of social networking (such as youth associations and NGOs). Sources: Betcherman and others 2006; project documents. The Role Played by TVET Sierra Leone's education pyramid narrows sharply,with net enrollment rates of just 13 percent at the junior-secondary level and 7 percent at the senior-secondary level.(Gross enrollment rates,which include over-age enrollees,are twice these lev- els.) The pipeline is expanding rapidly, however, as primary net enrollment rates have reached 75 percent, and demand for secondary education is expected to increase.When this happens,questions will be asked about the appropriate balance of resources between general education and much more expensiveTVET. In 2006 about 200 formal and nonformal TVET institutions existed in Sierra Leone, 30 percent of them created after 2000.The private sector plays an impor- tant role in TVET provision, accounting for 24 percent of the total number of providers.Communities,faith-based organizations,and NGOs account for another 35 percent.The government owns only 4 percent of TVET institutions and assists the remainder (37 percent) with financing.These government-assisted institutions function like private institutions for the most part, determining their own salary International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 93 scales for staff.They hire and dismiss instructors with little reference to govern- ment criteria and design their own curricula.To a large extent, they fix their own student fees.These institutions account for 51 percent of trainees enrolled.In con- trast,privately ownedTVET institutions,while large in number,are generally small in size, enrolling only 16 percent of trainees. Within the TVET system, 44 percent of trainees were enrolled in community education centers (CECs) in 2003/04, including both CEC-B and CEC-A pro- grams (figure 5.1). Vocational trade centers accounted for 7 percent of those enrolled inTVET,while technical vocational centers and technical vocational insti- tutes enrolled 16 and 22 percent,respectively.The remaining trainees were enrolled in schools that combined different levels of TVET (9 percent) or schools whose identity was not known (3 percent).The Western Urban and Bo districts had the largest number of institutions and students. Overall, women made up more than 60 percent of enrollments in 2003/04, although gender stereotyping by subject is still prevalent inTVET,with men accounting for more than 95 percent of students in technology options, including auto repair, welding, and electronics. Evidence points to the poor quality of learning conditions and learning out- comes, as well as an outdated curricula with little relevance to the labor market.A 2005 survey drew attention to the weakened state of infrastructure, the lack of properly trained instructors, inadequate equipment, and the failure of institutions to respond to market demand (GTZ,MEST,and SSL 2005). Access to higher-level skills is uneven.Across 14 districts, only institutions in the western region and the Bonthe and Kenema districts offered programs at the national diploma level. Technology programs do not exist in some districts above the CEC level.The TVET system is largely supply-oriented and has not responded quickly to the job market, tending to react to rather than anticipate needs. In addition, Sierra Leone has not been able to develop an economic niche and has therefore not been able to plan for future skill requirements (World Bank 2007a). More than 90 percent of Sierra Leone's training institutions do not possess the minimum laboratories, workshops, or library facilities to run their programs (World Bank 2007a).As a result, courses requiring inexpensive equipment (such as courses in business or tie-dying) are common.The equipment for technology options such as automechanics,welding,and electronics is not readily available.The qualification levels of teachers and administrative staff are low, with only about half possessing trade certificates, the minimum qualification. Many need further training but do not possess the minimum requirements for entry into teacher training institutions; those who meet the requirements can find more lucrative opportunities upon completion of training. Student learning outcomes are poor, with low pass rates on examinations conducted by the National Commission for Technical,Vocational and other Academic Awards (World Bank 2007a). Government spending on education has risen sharply since 2000, along with overall government spending.Spending on education has represented about 16­17 percent of total public spending and 4.2­4.9 percent of GDP since 2000,which is favorable in comparison with other countries emerging from internal conflicts. 94 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Figure 5.1 Structure of Sierra Leone's Education System Postgraduate Degree Official Class Teacher Age1 Certificate & Undergraduate Degree Polytechnics Higher Teacher Tech/Voc Certificate Institute (TVI) 17 SSS 3 Senior Secondary School 16 SSS 2 Tech/Voc Center Vocational Trade (SSS) 15 SSS (TVC) Center (VTC) 14 JSS 3 Junior Secondary School Community Edu 13 JSS 2 (JSS) Center-A (CEC-B) 12 JSS 1 11 P 6 10 P 5 9 P 4 Community Edu Primary 8 P 3 Center-B (CEC-B) 7 P 2 6 P 1 5 Prep 3 4 Prep 2 Pre-Primary 3 Prep 1 Teacher General Technical/Vocational Training TVET Program Entry Requirement Level Duration Community Education Center-B No formal schooling Non-formal / Primary 2-6 months (CEC-B) Community Education Center-A Completed primary education Primary to JSS 2-6 months (CEC-A) Vocational Trade Center (VTC) Attempted the BECE JSS to early SSS 6 months - 2 years Tech/Voc Center (TVC) Passed at least 3 subjects in BECE JSS to SSS 6 months - 2 years Tech/Voc Institute (TVI) Attempted the WASSCE SSS to Post SSS below 6 months - 2 years Tertiary Polytechnics Passed at least 4 subjects in WASSCE Post SSS to Tertiary 2-3 years Source: World Bank 2007a. Note: The Basic Education Certificate Examination (BESC) taken at completion of junior-secondary education plays a key role in the choice of pathways available for young people in obtaining skills. The West Africa Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE), taken at the end of senior- secondary education, determines which pathways to tertiary education are open. However, the increased spending has not translated into increased spending on TVET. Overall spending on secondary education fell from 25 percent of total education spending in 2000 to 20 percent in 2002, before rising to 22 percent in 2004.The allocation to TVET decreased substantially, from 9 percent in 2000 to 4 percent in 2004, equivalent to a nearly 25 percent drop in real terms over four years. Private household expenditures on education have matched those of gov- ernment spending,as reflected in the 2003/04 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey (SLIHS).Exclusive of spending onTVET,the contribution of households International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 95 to secondary education was larger than that of the government,accounting for 60 percent of total spending at this level (World Bank 2007a). The per student cost of TVET is high in Sierra Leone (as elsewhere), at about twice the cost of senior-secondary education and nearly seven times the cost of primary education (World Bank 20007a).12 The case for further investment, pub- lic or private, must be determined by weighing these costs against the economic and social benefits. Ensuring access to primary education for all is, of course, a high priority and a stepping stone to further education and training opportunities. Good training requires young people who have the requisite general education for acquiring skills for the workplace.Knowledge of basic math,sciences,and communication skills is essential to acquiring job-specific skills and encouraging employers to invest in workers.Finding the right balance between investing in those now starting school and those preparing for entry to the workforce and searching for employment is especially important at this time in Sierra Leone. Doing so requires a diversified system of private and public financing for education and training. The problems associated with access, quality, relevance, efficiency, and financ- ing found in Sierra Leone'sTVET system are not unusual in the region.Faced with a diverse provider community for TVET, countries have established governance frameworks to integrate the system and improve efficiency and links to the mar- ket.13 These authorities--sometimes embedded in ministries, sometimes set up as autonomous bodies--bring employers, workers, civil society, and government together in making decisions and allocating public spending for TVET. Different models have powers ranging from providing advice to making decisions, with responsibilities covering different activities supporting a market-led training sys- tem. Each country designs its governance framework to fit its circumstances and actors' needs. Sierra Leone would have to do the same. To improve the relevance and efficiency of training,countries are moving away from centralized TVET systems and bringing decisions on instructor hiring and firing, curriculum and course offerings, choice of pedagogy, and management of locally generated resources closer to the market. Instead of ministry officials mak- ing decisions, managers of training institutions are taking responsibility, with the expectation they will be held accountable for performance. Decentralized man- agement has become an important tool for reform and improving market out- comes. At the same time, it requires building the capacity of local managers of training institutions to make decisions that they have not been called on before to make.They must become adept at reading local market demand and organizing resources to meet this demand.With the small public ownership ofTVET institu- tions in Sierra Leone, this is not a critical reform, but it could be the basis for realigning existing public institutions and their performance. Perhaps the most important issue other than financing is ensuring the quality of TVET training. Quality can vary widely across training systems, and efforts to integrate public and private provision require reforms introducing quality assur- ance frameworks. In high-income countries and some developing countries, 96 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone national qualification frameworks have been created that grant credit for past learning from a variety of different modes of delivery accepted in the marketplace and in education systems as a measure of learning and performance.Whether the skill is acquired informally in the workplace or in a school setting, the learning can be measured and credit given, placing all forms of training on a level playing field. National qualification frameworks require considerable capacity to develop and manage and may not be suitable for a low-income country with limited implementation capacity. A different but related TVET reform involves engaging employers in setting occupational standards to guide curriculum development. Reforms that bring employers into this process can improve the relevance and quality of the train- ing offered.Testing and certification of trainees can then determine if the stan- dard has been met. Building a standards-based training system focuses attention not just on what goes into skills development but what comes out: the impact of the training on employment, earnings, and further education and training. Other indicators of quality include setting minimum standards for training institutions, usually in licensing procedures but also in setting higher minimums, as done in accreditation procedures.These procedures may be established by government or by industry members themselves. Public subsidies are often limited to accredited training institutions. Building a quality assurance framework for TVET is essential and should be a priority reform for Sierra Leone,with its large nongovernment provider base.By set- ting standards and providing a framework for evaluation of the training offered by public and private institutions alike, the government can assess the effectiveness of actions to improve training outcomes at the institutional level.Attention to preser- vice instructor training and in-service training are important steps toward quality.In 2006 the Ministry of Education,Science andTechnology set up a committee on in- service training as a first step to establishing a body to coordinate in-service training in the country (World Bank 2007a). Curriculum reform should follow, including production of instructional materials that connect what is taught with employer- based standards,with a focus on entrepreneurial skills for the highly informal econ- omy of Sierra Leone. Innovations involving modular, competency-based curricula can also play an important role in promoting lifelong learning, enabling workers to renew their skills as changes occur over the lifecycle (Johanson and Adams 2004). Equipping managers of training institutions with tools to manage more effectively in a market economy can in turn lead to better use of resources for quality. How Sierra Leone financesTVET and the incentives it creates for improving relevance, quality, and efficiency are also important. Public expenditure for TVET, at 4 percent of education expenditures, is low by low-income country norms; 10 percent would be a more appropriate target. It may be some time before this target can be achieved, however, as Sierra Leone's economy recovers. Other sources of financing can be sought from contracted training services to employers, sale of goods and services by training organizations in communities, community contributions, and external donor assistance. International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 97 How resources are mobilized and spent is also critical. Performance-based budgeting, competitive procurement of training, and vouchers are some of the demand-side financing reforms that can change the incentives for performance of training institutions. Such reforms are particularly relevant for the 37 percent of institutions subsidized with public resources. A policy framework for TVET, including legislation and ministerial decrees, is important to provide transparency to all stakeholders. As part of this frame- work, the roles of government and the private sector have to be defined. Confusion about roles can lead to the misuse of resources. Governments play a critical role in policy development,promoting access and equity,correcting cap- ital and information market failures and distortions,and supporting public goods and institutions, such as program monitoring and evaluation, quality assurance, labor market information, consumer protection, and sector regulation. In East Asia, governments have adopted a more strategic role for public provision to develop the skills needed to achieve development objectives and promote inno- vation.The private sector can play a larger role in policy development and gov- ernance through public-private partnerships and the provision and financing of training for young people and adults. Policies, Strategies, and Programs forYoung People Sierra Leone has made significant progress in developing policies and strategies to promote employment of people 15­35.A new policy was approved in 2003 that identifies job creation opportunities and skills training as a key strategic area for intervention.The Sierra Leone Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) identi- fies the need to create job opportunities for the large and growing number of young people as one of the country's main development challenges;it is crucial for maintaining peace and promotion of pro-poor growth in Sierra Leone.The PRSP II, currently under preparation by the government elected in 2007, will maintain the focus on the overriding challenge of extreme poverty, accentuated by high unemployment, especially among the young (World Bank 2008a). In 2006 the government developed a National Action Plan for Youth, which aims to provide immediate employment opportunities for young people and to develop a medium- and long-term strategy for tackling their employment (UNOWA 2007).The objectives of the program are to: · Increase employment and self-employment of young people in key sectors · Enhance the skill level,confidence,and employability of young people,in order to enhance their capacity to contribute socially and economically · Centralize the employment of young people in the overall national develop- ment framework. After the 2007 presidential and parliamentary elections,the Ministry of Youth and Sports was transferred to the new Ministry of Education,Youth and Sports.The 98 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone president's vision for the employment and empowerment of young people includes the creation of a national youth commission (to provide focused policy direction and leadership to the many agencies and departments of the government dealing with young people) and nationwide labor centers (to invest in the country's work force and assist in job placement) (UN 2008). Employment and training programs for young people increased substantially in Sierra Leone after the demobilization process.An overview of recently imple- mented programs shows that comprehensive programs,entrepreneurship schemes, skills training programs, and public work schemes are the most commonly adopted types of intervention (appendix C).This composition is consistent with the pattern of employment programs for young people across Sub-Saharan Africa during the past decade (as documented by theYEI 2006). Sierra Leone's multi- ple-service interventions approach focuses on life skills,job training,microcredit, and temporary employment opportunities (for example,public works).Additional support services include counseling and the provision of inputs (for example, seeds, wood, and animals) with which to develop income-generating activities. About two-thirds of donor programs in the country include self-employment modules, mainly in agriculture.The entrepreneurship schemes support the cre- ation of small business and agricultural cooperatives through training in the design and implementation of business plans, business management, startup grants, and life skills. Most job training programs offer nonformal education in productive trades such as carpentry, tailoring, and construction.These programs assist young people with low levels of education and lack of skills.They encourage participation by women by providing childcare allowances.A common element across many types of interventions is the provision of life skills, particularly relevant in the reintegra- tion process of excombatants and their families in a productive civilian life.Special attention is given to HIV/AIDS awareness, conflict transformation, and drug pre- vention. Public works schemes have been limited to short-term employment cre- ation, without accompanying skills development. Employment programs for young people rely greatly on donors' participation for design,finance,and implementation.Partnerships with NGOs and government agencies facilitate the implementation and expansion of the programs across the country. Interventions target excombatants and other young people affected by war, as well as young people who are out of school or unemployed (recent inter- ventions no longer specifically target excombatants). Second-chance education programs to catch up for missed school opportuni- ties during the civil war are being phased out.To respond to the high demand for second-chance education,programs such as the Complementary Rapid Education for Primary Schools (CREPS) were set up to provide educational opportunities for young people who had had a break in their schooling as a result of the con- flict. CREPS covered primary education expenses for people 16 and older for a period of three years.At the end of the three years,participants took the National Primary School Examination (NPSE) to determine if they could continue on to International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 99 junior-secondary level education. In 2004 the CREPS program benefited about 110,000 students (World Bank 2007a). CREPS has started to be phased out, as the backlog of war-affected children is absorbed into formal education. The coverage and scope of employment interventions for young people in Sierra Leone is growing. Adequate evaluations with which to assess their effec- tiveness are lacking,however.Most programs have only basic and descriptive infor- mation;very few have instruments to measure their performance.Thus it is almost impossible to make a judgment about the quality of interventions. Measuring the impact of employment programs for young people is crucial to determining cost- effectiveness, particularly in a resource-constrained environment. The few evaluated programs show limited success in improving labor market outcomes.A first set of evaluations refers to projects implemented as part of the Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration (DDR) Program. An ex post survey of the program suggests that at least 7 percent of the 79,000 demobilized Sierra Leonean fighters experienced severe problems in gaining acceptance from family and community,finding employment,and accepting the democratic process (Weinstein and Humphreys 2005). The Youth Reintegration Training and Education for Peace (YRTEP) Program provided 55,000 young people with counseling,life skills,and agricultural skills development.A follow-up survey finds disappointing results in job placement and the creation of productive activities, with the skills acquired fading rapidly in the absence of financial support to spon- sor entrepreneurial initiatives (Hansen and others 2002). A study measuring the impact of reintegration programs for excombatants finds limited results in sustain- able employment for participants (Simon 2003). It is important to remember that the main objective of these programs was to demobilize and reintegrate excom- batants into society, not to provide training leading to sustainable livelihood. Reintegration objectives usually trumped those related to employment, rightfully so.As such, the overall effectiveness of the DDR interventions could be consid- ered a success, as peace has prevailed in Sierra Leone since 2002. A second set of evaluations looks at programs beyond the DDR. The Disadvantaged Children andYouth Program (DCYP), implemented in Freetown, Kenema, and Tongo Field, reports moderate effects on employment, providing long-term job opportunities for its beneficiaries on a minimal scale.A recent sur- vey suggests that many of the basic education and vocational training programs implemented by donors and international agencies resulted in few direct and vis- ible impacts on employment of young people (UNIDO 2007). Current programming approaches display weaknesses that may undermine effectiveness.These issues are common in programs in many countries.Addressing these weaknesses is crucial to improve the cost-effectiveness and impact of pro- grams.The most common weaknesses include the following: · Programs are mainly supply driven. · The quality of training is extremely variable. · Project teams have limited implementation capabilities. 100 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone · Targeting of program participants is weak or nonexistent. · Participation of the emerging private sector is minimal. · Impact evaluations are weak or nonexistent. A major problem for skills training and entrepreneurship programs is the missing link with labor market demand,as international experience shows.Most programs providing skills training do not evaluate the absorptive capacity of the market for the skills provided, in good measure because they do not work closely with the formal or informal private sector. Graduates of the Disadvantaged Children and Youth Program, for example, complain of not being able to use their acquired skills in the market because of market saturation and inability to compete because the technical skills they learned were not cutting edge.As a result, more than 25 percent sold the startup kits received after training. Focus group discussions con- firmed that in many communities, young people cannot use their recently acquired skills as a result of limited demand (World Bank/ENCISS 2007). Some of the main challenges and risks associated with youth employment pro- grams include the potential for aid dependency,high dropout rates,the difficulty of accessing remote areas and other transportation issues,and the problem of elite cap- ture.To mitigate aid dependency, the Skills Training and Employment Generation project implemented by the Christian Children's Fund required that communities cofinance project costs.This proved successful in reducing the reliance on outside financial support, and it greatly enhanced community ownership of the interven- tion (another identified risk). In order to mitigate dropout rates, the program staff in the Disadvantaged Children andYouth Program suggested that participants be exposed to the realities of the labor market before signing up for specific courses. Transportation issues resulted in substantial implementation delays in some cases and usually increased the operational costs.14 Communication problems were caused not only by the dearth of adequate infrastructure but also by personality con- flicts and perhaps cultural differences.In theWorldVisionYRTEP project,the result was less project monitoring and a slower response in project design to the chang- ing facts on the ground.To address elite capture at the training centers, coalition resources ensured that the centers were run by boards of young people from differ- ent societal groups, with equal representation by men and women. Some programs have incorporated lessons learned from previous programs. The Freetown Waste Management System program, for example, incorporates labor-intensive infrastructure projects with training and the promotion of small and medium-size enterprises to achieve sustainable livelihood opportunities for participants.Another potentially promising approach is the joint program for pri- vate sector and youth enterprise development program initiated by the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), and the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), under which a public-private consultative mechanism would be established.The pro- gram,which is open to all interested agencies,is an example of harmonization and joint programming initiatives by UN agencies in Sierra Leone. International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 101 Sierra Leone reflects international experience in its array of employment programs for young people. Job creation is the top priority. Reliance on entre- preneurship is a potentially effective strategy,but further actions will be needed, including improving the targeting of beneficiaries and the linkages with labor market needs. It is doubtful that wage subsidies would go far, given the small size of the wage sector.With donor support, public works and public service employ- ment could expand the instruments available for job creation, but programs must be designed to provide experience and skills that create more permanent employ- ment options.The TVET system has been expanding, offering more choices for training and improving skill profiles, but all indicators point to the weaknesses of this system.Among current programs,there are few initiatives to improve the train- ing system.Support from GermanTechnical Cooperation (GTZ) has helped doc- ument the scope of the problem and the need for further reforms. Conclusions Finding employment for young people is critical to reintegrating them into the economy and promoting peaceful development.This chapter extracts lessons from the YEI and its 289 youth programs worldwide that might be applied to Sierra Leone; it also examines youth programs in Sierra Leone. Four factors are identi- fied as influencing workforce development for youth: education, apprenticeship and work experience, labor market programs, and labor market policies.Young people in Sierra Leone largely missed the first two of these factors as a result of the conflict. Labor market programs have been left to fill the gap, to prepare this gen- eration of young people for economic and social development. TheYEI highlights several interventions for targeted job creation.Of those eval- uated, public works and public service employment hold promise for temporary employment. Contracting for public works using the AGETIP approach, which works through NGOs, merits careful consideration. Experience shows that atten- tion to design is required to ensure that programs of this type provide young peo- ple with the skills they need to acquire permanent employment.Wage subsidies creating jobs in the private sector require the same attention to design, but in an economy with a small formal sector, potential job creation is limited. Improving the chances of success of young entrepreneurs holds promise in Sierra Leone. But training for entrepreneurship is insufficient by itself; it requires a complement of other services covering business counseling, techni- cal assistance, and access to credit.TheYEI points to the advantage of NGOs in implementing these programs. Careful targeting and involvement of the private sector are also crucial. Comprehensive programs providing an array of services that can be tailored to the needs of disadvantaged young people have worked in other countries, but they are costly and require careful targeting to manage their cost. Preparing young people with the skills required by the labor market is critical. While international experience with training programs is mixed, a key feature of successful programs has been a strong link between training and market demand. 102 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Programs in Sierra Leone will need to establish these linkages. Simultaneously, strengthening training providers will be a key element in developing successful programs. Not all training needs to be done in the classroom: traditional apprenticeships are working throughoutWest Africa.Improving traditional apprenticeships will be an important strategy for Sierra Leone as it tries to connect the skills needs of the market with employment for young people. Sierra Leone's TVET system suffers from low quality, low relevance,limited access,inefficiencies,and cutbacks in pub- lic financing. Improving this system will require attention to numerous reforms regarding governance, management, quality, and financing. Notes 1. This section draws on Adams (2007). 2. For reviews of labor policies and their impact on employment, see Nickell and Layard (1999),Addison andTeixeria (2001), andWorld Bank (2005e). 3. For reviews of labor market programs, see Bowers, Sonnet, and Bardone (1999); Dar and Tzannatos (1999); Betcherman and others (2000); Martin and Grub (2001); Ryan (2001); and Betcherman, Olivas, and Dar (2004). 4. This section draws on Betcherman and others (2007) and Puerto (2007). 5. The inventory covers mainly programs for young people, with some emphasis on programs for workers of all ages that have a focus on the young; it is limited to postschooling interventions. 6. The LICUS initiative was undertaken by the World Bank in 2002, in order to improve development aid effectiveness in fragile states.Since then the Bank has iden- tified 35 member countries and assessed potential tools and recommendations to help them get back on a path of sustained growth and poverty reduction. Nine LICUS and postconflict countries and territories are covered by the inventory: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Burundi, the Central African Republic, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Kosovo, Nigeria, theWest Bank and Gaza, and Zimbabwe. 7. These results are based on probit estimates of positive program outcomes on country level of development. 8. For descriptions of promising programs for young entrepreneurs,entrepreneurship pro- grams in rural areas (albeit programs that have not been rigorously evaluated), and a promising microcredit scheme, see appendix C. 9. This finding relies largely on evaluations carried out in OECD countries that found neg- ative or zero impacts on employability.Twenty-five net impact evaluations were analyzed on skills training programs and training-friendly interventions. Fifteen of these studies (43 percent) took place in OECD countries. Among these studies, nine (60 percent) reported negative or zero impacts on employability and earnings. 10. For a detailed description of the Jóvenes program, see appendix C. 11. This section is based on a special country status report of education in Sierra Leone prepared by theWorld Bank (2007a) and a survey of TVET institutions conducted in 2004 by GermanyTechnical Cooperation (GTZ) in collaboration with the Ministry of International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 103 Education,Science,andTechnology and Statistics Sierra Leone (GTZ,MEST,and SSL 2005). Additional data were drawn from the National Commission for Technical, Vocational and other Academic Awards (NCTVA). 12. These estimates are similar to those found in other countries of Sub-SaharanAfrica and globally (Johanson and Adams 2004). 13. National training authorities are found in Côte d'Ivoire,Mauritius,Mozambique,South Africa, Tanzania, and Zambia, as well as in Australia, Brazil, Jordan, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Singapore. 14. Transportation was a significant barrier to markets in the Linkages for Livelihood Security and Economic Development Project (LINKS) project conducted by USAID (see appendix C). Main Findings and 6 Recommendations C reating job opportunities for the large and growing number of young people is a priority of the government. This study aims to inform the gov- ernment and other stakeholders of the main issues and challenges that young people face in the labor market.This chapter summarizes the main findings of this report.It then proposes a strategy for improving sustainable employment for young people in Sierra Leone. Main Findings and Conclusions To improve the understanding of the constraints as well as the opportunities young people experience in the Sierra Leonean labor market,this study analyzes the char- acteristics of young people in Sierra Leone,the relationship between young people and the labor market, the skill needs of the labor market, and national and inter- national skill development programs to enhance the employability of young people. The main findings in each of these areas are presented in this section. Profile of Young People in Sierra Leone Promoting employment opportunities for people 15­35 is identified in the Sierra Leone Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (SLPRSP) as one of the country's main development challenges and as crucial for maintaining peace and promoting pro-poor growth. The definition of young people in Sierra Leone (15­35) is broad, comprising adolescents (15­19), youth (20­24), and young adults (25­35), each at different stages in the transition from child to adulthood.The inclusion of young adults partly reflects the effect of the conflict and the role today's young adults played 105 106 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone during it.Almost 34 percent of Sierra Leoneans fall between 15 and 35,and almost 80 percent are under 35. During adolescence,more than half of the population is still in school,most start their sexual life, and almost half of females become mothers. Youth represents the "transition age."Most people leave school during this time and start their full-time work lives;inactivity and unemployment rates are highest among this group. Young adults are similar to adults.Only as young adults do most men transition into fam- ily life and become independent household heads.In contrast,almost half of young females are mothers by the age of 19, and marriage follows similar patterns as motherhood. For young male adults, becoming financially independent is associ- ated with the timing of the transition to marriage and parenthood. The social patterns in postconflict Sierra Leone are changing,but intergenerational tensions remain.The conflict in Sierra Leone was fought primarily by marginalized uneducated rural young people who lacked access to livelihood opportunities.The control of elders over land--and especially the labor of young people--while the economic system was collapsing resulted in the social,political,and economic mar- ginalization of young people. Lack of opportunities resulted in the collapse of expectations and the spread of hopelessness.While the postwar period has seen increased participation of young people at the national and local political level and an increase in self-organized social activism, institutional values have changed lit- tle, and elders from strong lineages have stakes in reviving the old system to hold onto their power over young people and their labor. While there are roughly equal numbers of males and females who are children, adolescents, and adults in Sierra Leone, only 45 percent of the 20­35 age group is male.This gender imbalance is primarily a rural phenomenon.Among 20- to 35- year-olds in rural areas,only 42 percent are male.This is partly a result of the higher levels of migration to urban areas by young men, especially to the Freetown area. Two-thirds of Sierra Leone's population lives in rural areas,but 53 percent of peo- ple 20­24 and 58 percent of people 25­29 are urbanized. Young People and Labor Markets Limited labor market opportunities for young people are more closely linked to the overall challenging economic situation in Sierra Leone than to the specifici- ties associated with their age. Economic growth is hampered by limited private sector development, weak local purchasing power, and insufficient infrastructure and access to electricity, among other factors. Improved economic growth is a priority for increased employment opportunities for both young people and mature adults.1 Farm owners face labor market constraints, including the shortage and cost of labor. More than 10 percent of farmers cannot find the workers they need for general cultivation of their farms or the extra workers they need during peak sea- sons. Unlike urban enterprise owners, farmers, especially small farmers, perceive the cost of labor as one of the top constraints faced by agricultural producers.Other top constraints include pests and inadequate access to financing and equipment. Main Findings and Recommendations 107 Agricultural employers often prefer young men as hired labor,but there is a shortage of young men in rural areas as a result of urban migration. In addition to overall economic conditions, the study finds that young people in Sierra Leone face the following constraints to and opportunities for employment: · The overall skill level of young people is low.Average education levels are very low, with 35 percent of 15- to 24-year olds and 63 percent of 25- to 35-year- olds never having attended school.Among both age groups, only 20 percent finished primary school, and only 2 percent of 25- to 35-year-olds have more than a secondary-school education.While access to education has increased significantly since the end of the conflict, enrollment levels remain low, the quality of education is poor,and repetition rates are very high.The inadequate supply of young people (and adults) with more than secondary education requires recruitment of expatriate labor to fill technical positions in the grow- ing private sector and could potentially limit the growth of businesses with demands for highly skilled labor. · Inactivity rates in the labor market are high, especially in urban areas. Many young people are not in school,not working,and not looking for employment. Urban and rural adolescents have similar rates of inactivity in the labor market (13 percent).By the age of 20­24,however,one in three urban residents com- pared with one in six rural residents is inactive in the labor market.While inac- tivity rates for rural youth (20­24) are similar to those for mature adults, those for urban youth (20­24) and young adults (25­35) are higher than those of urban adults. Labor market inactivity rates for male and female youth are sim- ilar. However, while inactivity rates for female youth are similar to those of adults, those for male youth are almost twice as high as those for male adults. · Truly inactive young men are not a serious problem. Only 5­10 percent of young men who are inactive in the labor market have no intention of finding work.They report that there are no jobs available,so it is not even worth look- ing,and complain that jobs are awarded through connections,rather than skills. This perception is confirmed by analysis showing that adults have higher employment levels than young people even if they have the same level of edu- cation. One-quarter of all young men who are inactive in the labor market report spending their time on home duties, but only 9 percent of adult men say the same. · Unemployment levels are highest among young urban men.The overall unem- ployment level as measured by the traditional International Labor Organization definition for Sierra Leone is low, at 3.2 percent.As in other countries in the region,unemployment is mainly an urban phenomenon,with urban 15- to 24- year-olds about 20 times as likely to be unemployed as their rural counterparts. Productive activities are more structured and less abundant in urban areas than in rural areas, where unpaid subsistence activities are common for both young people and mature adults.The higher unemployment levels of young men ver- sus young women are linked to men's higher education levels. 108 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone · Unemployment levels fail to capture discouraged inactive workers,the under- employed,and people with very low-paying,poor-quality jobs.This holds true for both young people and adults, but levels tend to be higher among young people.For example,nearly 10 percent of youth 20­24 who are inactive in the labor market are discouraged workers, compared with 3 percent for adults, reflecting a higher level of hopelessness among youth.As in other Sub-Saharan African countries,many people are too poor to be unemployed and must take up work regardless of its quality or level of remuneration.The levels of unpaid labor are very high in Sierra Leone, especially in rural areas, where subsistence farming is the norm. Unemployment rates also fail to capture underemploy- ment. One in five youth 20­24 is working fewer hours than he or she would like, compared with one in six adults.While the level of full-time workers is similar for female youth and adults,male adolescents and youth are more likely than their adult counterparts to work part time. · Like adults,young people are concentrated in agricultural activities,in the infor- mal sector, and among the self-employed.Agricultural activities represent 70 percent of employment, with similar levels for young people and adults.The service sector is underpopulated by young people.In contrast,young people are heavily represented in the retail industry. Formal sector employment increases with age but is very low across the lifecycle (9 percent for the working-age pop- ulation).Self-employment represents more than half of all employment in Sierra Leone.The self-employed report lack of other opportunities in the labor mar- ket as the main reason for becoming self-employed. · Young people tend to have less promising employment opportunities than adults: ­ Less than half of young workers receive payment for their labor, compared with two-thirds of adults,even though they are better educated than adults. ­ Young people have fewer opportunities for salaried employment than mature adults. ­ Formal employment opportunities are significantly lower for young people. ­ Public sector employment opportunities are mainly for people over 35. ­ The desire to change jobs is highest among 25- to 35-year-olds. ­ Employers rely mostly on connections for hiring new employees, which works against young people,who have fewer connections and weaker work- relevant social capital. · Young people face additional constraints for stable livelihood opportuni- ties beyond the labor market.They have less access to land, especially for tree-crop farming.Only 9 percent of surveyed farms were owned by people under 35.Young people also have very limited access to microcredit. · Young women have less access to secure paid employment opportunities than young men.They have significantly lower levels of paid employment, wage employment, and formal employment than their male counterparts and report substantially higher levels of unpaid family work.These differences can Main Findings and Recommendations 109 be explained partly by women's role as caregivers for their children and families and their lower education levels. Employers tend to prefer young men over young women and perceive young women as less skilled,less hard working,and less reliable than young men.Young women feel they are often discriminated against in the labor market. · Not everyone is cut out to be an entrepreneur or self-employed.The educa- tion levels of current entrepreneurs and the self-employed are significantly higher than average.The level of education of business owners increases with the size of the business. Patterns for farm owners are similar, although the dif- ferences in skill levels are significantly lower. · People who were 25­35 in 2004 (that is, teenagers during the conflict) are better integrated into labor markets than people 20­24.They have similar lev- els of labor force participation, full-time employment, and self-employment as adults. Male and urban young adults have lower labor force participation rates and higher inactivity rates than mature adults from the same population group, however. Agriculture, infrastructure, tourism, retail trade, and mining offer potential for increasing employment among young people: · The agriculture and agrobusiness sector has the potential to absorb a large number of unskilled workers. It will be the main driver of economic growth and poverty reduction in the short term. Potential areas of growth are food crop production for the domestic market and, in the medium to longer term, promotion of export products,such as cocoa and gari.Other potential employ- ment areas are livestock and artisanal fishery. Demand for agricultural labor, especially young men, exceeds supply. More than 10 percent of farmers can- not find the workers they need for the general cultivation of their farms or the additional workers needed during peak seasons,and it is likely that the current scarcity of labor for agriculture will increase in the near future. · The infrastructure sector holds great potential for absorbing young workers, given the high levels of investment in infrastructure planned for the future and the low-skill nature of the work. · Development of tourism would help respond to the need for stable employ- ment for some unemployed young people in the Freetown area. · Provision of higher-level skills to young people in mining areas could increase their potential involvement in the emerging small-scale mechanized mining sector. Support to increase the share of revenue going to low-skilled labor in the artisanal mining sector would benefit young men.While the artisanal mining sector is expected to decline in the near future,many young men participate at the bottom of the supply chain and would benefit from revenue-sharing interventions. · The retail industry employs a large share of young people,both as self-employed small-scale merchants and as employees.Young women are heavily involved in retail sales of agricultural products. 110 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Employers view skill strengthening of employees as central to increasing pro- ductivity and product quality.About one-third of farmers and one-sixth of busi- ness employers perceive the skill level of employees as problematic. The skill shortage is particularly severe for employers of larger businesses and farms and for formal versus informal employers.Marketing and management training are in high demand for all type of businesses. Especially at larger firms, production technol- ogy, information technology, basic accounting, and safety training are prioritized. Four out of five farmers prioritize food-processing technology, followed by liter- acy, marketing, and basic veterinary skills. Lack of resources is the main reason why employers do not provide formal training.Willingness to pay for training increases with the size of the business or farm. Farmers need support to identify the relevant training and trainers for their employees. Lessons from International Experience Several lessons from other countries' experience are important for Sierra Leone: · An improved TVET system is a potential mechanism for increasing the skill levels of the young people of tomorrow. As primary net enrollment rates increase,demand for secondary education is expected to increase.A balance will have to be found between funding general education and TVET, especially given the much higher unit cost of TVET.There is a growing demand for places in training institutions, but the quality and skill relevance to market needs remain low.A reformed, efficient TVET system has the potential to partially respond to the demand for higher-skilled workers in the labor market. · Strengthening traditional apprenticeships is a promising,cost-effective alterna- tive for increasing the skill levels of young people with low skills,with the addi- tional benefit of introducing master craftspeople to new technologies to increase productivity. · Public works programs targeting low-skilled young people can be effective if they are combined with skill development and attention is paid to prevent corruption. · Training programs for young entrepreneurs and the self-employed tend to have high failure rates, mainly because of weak links to market demand and poor targeting.However,if well designed and monitored,these programs can be suc- cessful in a low-income country with a small wage sector. · Comprehensive programs, including education equivalency programs, train- ing, and mentoring, are effective in addressing the needs of disadvantaged young people and those who missed out on education during the conflict. Although costly,these programs have been effective in many countries and can address the diversity of needs in a postconflict setting.Careful targeting of par- ticipants is crucial. · Skills training programs are among the most costly interventions for young peo- ple,and failure rates can be high.However,given the low level of and high demand Main Findings and Recommendations 111 for skills in Sierra Leone, skills training programs will be required. Engaging the private sector in training delivery and design is an effective tool for mitigating the risk of high-cost training that is disconnected from market demand. · Reverse migration programs from urban to rural areas do not work and are costly.Young people already in urban areas have a strong resolve to remain there. Creating sustainable livelihood opportunities for young people in rural areas may encourage voluntary migration from urban areas, without the need for specific programs. Recommendations:A Strategy for Strengthening Employment amongYoung People Sierra Leone has made significant efforts to promote the development of its young people.It has a policy on young people that establishes job creation and skills training for them as key strategic areas; it also has a National Action Plan for young people. The government is in the process of developing a NationalYouth Commission--to provide focused policy direction and leadership to the many agencies and departments dealing with issues affecting young people--and nationwide labor centers to invest in the country's work force and assist in job placement (UN 2008).With the support of the international community, the government is implementing various schemes to enhance opportunities,particularly job opportunities,for young people. A review of policies and programs reveals a number of weaknesses that need to be addressed if they are to succeed: · The implementation capacity of the government and many NGOs and private sector providers of programs needs strengthening. · Programs are often poorly designed,mainly supply driven,and short term,with no followup. · Most programs focus on short-term employment creation instead of sustain- able employment. · Programs focus disproportionately on training, with weak program develop- ment and limited links to labor market demand. · Programs have invested heavily in entrepreneurship, with limited success. · Sierra Leone has invested significantly inTVET programs,without the hoped- for impact.Traditional apprenticeships may offer more promising as well as cost-effective opportunities. · The concept of young people in Sierra Leone is too broad.The government needs to adopt a definition that makes more sense from a programming and policy perspective. Given the challenging economic and human development situation in Sierra Leone,a dual approach is needed to address employment among young people.In the short term, cost-effective programs to support sustainable employment are required. In the longer term, investments and policy changes that can contribute 112 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone to economic growth are needed.To address the factors underlying the disequilib- rium in the labor market,such efforts must be combined with education and train- ing for more productive jobs in the growth sectors of the economy. Policies and programs also need to address constraints young people face outside of the labor market, including by improving access to land. While employment of young people can be improved through the inter- ventions proposed below, limited work opportunities will remain a reality for both young people and mature adults in the near future, given the poor eco- nomic and human development situation in Sierra Leone.A sustained recovery of the economy,improved investment climate,and increased development of the private sector are prerequisites for improved labor market opportunities; even the best-designed and implemented polices and programs are likely to fail in a stagnant economy. Policy and programming areas to improve sustainable livelihood opportunities for young people in Sierra Leone can be classified into four categories: · Priority short-term interventions that build on international experiences of cost-effective programs with positive impact or current opportunities in Sierra Leone (these interventions potentially have the greatest impact on the sustain- able employment opportunities of young people and would require relatively limited resources); · Programs and policy interventions that need to be implemented in the short term that have higher risk of failure and may entail high costs but are never- theless needed in the context of Sierra Leone (these types of intervention need to be implemented on a pilot basis and carefully monitored and evaluated before being scaled up); · Long-term interventions to improve employment opportunities of the young people of the future; and · Medium- to long-term interventions to get the environment right to benefit the young people of today and tomorrow. Priority Short-Term, Low-Risk Interventions The proposed priority short-term, low-risk interventions for enhancing labor market opportunities for young people include strengthening the skills of for- mal and informal private sector employers and their employees; implementing specific interventions in agriculture; developing work experience of young people through public work schemes; and strengthening the skills profile of out-of- school young people. APPROACH 1: ENHANCE LABOR MARKET OPPORTUNITIES BY STRENGTHENING THE SKILLS OF PRIVATE SECTOR EMPLOYERS AND THEIR EMPLOYEES (FORMAL AND INFORMAL). Providing support to businesses to achieve higher productivity and Main Findings and Recommendations 113 growth can create employment and opportunities for young people (as well as adults). On-the-job training is one of the most effective approaches for strength- ening skills. Providing support to employers and employees avoids the common pitfall of not linking labor market demand to training programs. Lack of resources is one of the main factors constraining employers from providing formal training, as is access to training outside of the Freetown and Bo area. Interventions include the following: · Increase the quality and availability of private training providers in management, export,production technology,marketing,information technology,accounting, human resource management, communication skills, basic literacy, and busi- ness development in both the formal and informal sectors. · Pilot voucher programs to strengthen the skill level of business owners in the formal private sector, with a focus on management and export training. · Pilot voucher programs to strengthen the skill level of formal sector profes- sionals, with a focus on production technology, marketing, information tech- nology, and accounting. · Develop programs to provide technical assistance to defunct large and medium- size businesses for rehabilitation plans and access to financing. · Pilot voucher programs to strengthen skill levels of small entrepreneurs and the self-employed in order to increase their production levels and their marketing and business development skills.Programs should help small entrepreneurs and the self-employed identify training for business growth. · Pilot cash transfer programs conditional on attendance at nonformal education programs to increase the literacy levels of unskilled workers in the formal and informal sectors. The programs should be demand-driven and developed in close collaboration with the private sector and donors.The government and donors should provide financial incentives to support smaller informal businesses in particular. Programs should ensure access for young formal and especially informal entrepreneurs and the self-employed. APPROACH 2: ENHANCE LABOR MARKET OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOUNG PEOPLE IN AGRICULTURE.The agricultural and agrobusiness sector has the potential to absorb a large number of unskilled young people and to be the main driver of economic growth and poverty reduction in the short term. One set of programs supports employers by raising the skill level of farmers and their employees,with a focus on demand-driven training.This report identifies labor market bottlenecks in rural areas, but programs to repatriate young people from urban to rural areas in other countries have been costly and unsuccessful.This approach therefore includes alter- native actions to address labor market bottlenecks. Interventions for strengthening the skills of farm owners and their employees include the following: 114 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone · Increase the quality and availability of private training providers in food pro- cessing, marketing, management, business development, basic accounting, and veterinary skills for small- and large-scale farmers and their employees. · Pilot voucher programs and matching grant schemes to facilitate access to such training programs by small- and large-scale farmers and their employees. Programs should help farmers identify training that will help their business grow. · Develop programs to provide technical assistance to defunct large-scale farms for rehabilitation plans and access to financing. · Pilot cash transfer programs conditional on attendance at nonformal education programs to increase literacy levels of farmers and their workers. Interventions to address labor market bottlenecks in rural areas include the following: · Support basic agricultural skill development for urban young people willing to undertake agricultural activities. · Pilot privately run programs to transport young urban job seekers to rural areas on a daily basis. · Support activities of groups of young people already organized in rural areas, such as youth labor teams (or "gangs," as they are called in Sierra Leone). These programs should be demand-driven,ensure access by young farmers,and be developed in close collaboration with the private sector and donors.The gov- ernment and donors should provide financial incentives to support farmers, espe- cially smaller farmers. APPROACH 3: ENHANCE LABOR MARKET OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOUNG PEOPLE BY PROVIDING THEM WITH WORK EXPERIENCE THROUGH PUBLIC WORK SCHEMES. Given Sierra Leone's infrastructure needs, the government will continue to invest significantly in public works in the near future.This provides an opportunity for low-skilled workers in both urban and rural areas to acquire initial work experi- ence and temporary incomes while constructing needed infrastructure and pro- viding necessary public services.There is also a huge backlog of maintenance, as scarce resources for road maintenance have been spent on emergency works. Developing innovative mechanisms for road maintenance and other public serv- ices, such as waste management by small and medium-size enterprises, holds the potential to absorb both unskilled and skilled young people. Contracting with NGOs for public works using the AGETIP approach (box 5.1) merits careful consideration given its success in other countries. Interventions include the following: · Provide short-term employment opportunities to young people through pub- lic work programs. Main Findings and Recommendations 115 · Develop a mechanism to ensure participation of higher-skilled young people in ongoing and planned infrastructure projects with a link to skill enhance- ment programs for self-employment and entrepreneurship. · Increase programs to develop small and medium-size enterprises that can respond to public works needs, such as road building, road maintenance, and waste management. The government and donors should provide short-term employment oppor- tunities while developing mechanisms to link public work schemes to basic training programs and small business development from donors, NGOs, and the private sector.To the extent possible, programs should be implemented at the decentralized level. Basic training would be provided by the private sector, NGOs,and donors.Attention needs to be paid to preventing corruption in these types of programs. APPROACH 4: IMPROVE THE SKILLS PROFILE OF YOUNG PEOPLE WHO ARE OUT OF SCHOOL. The low average skill levels of young people--caused partly by missed edu- cation during the conflict--constrain their opportunities for sustainable employment opportunities. Strengthening traditional apprenticeship systems would improve skill levels while at the same time improving technology levels of master craftspeople. Second-chance education programs--currently being scaled down--should be con- tinued, and they should be linked more directly with other job training, apprentice- ship, and entrepreneurial skill development programs.These equivalency programs should be combined with other services, such as training, counseling, and life-skill development, as part of comprehensive programs. Interventions include the following: · Provide training to master craftspeople to upgrade their technical and mana- gerial skills,including skills in marketing,production diversification,upgraded technology, and capacity to provide quality training. · Develop formal standards within a quality assurance framework and certify skills attained as a benchmark for quality and portability,while at the same time developing time limits for an apprentice to become a craftsperson. · Pilot conditional cash transfer programs providing outcome-oriented incen- tives to master craftspeople to ensure that apprentices pursue literacy training and reach a certifiable level of skills within an agreed-upon time. · Pilot saving schemes that help apprentices start their own businesses upon graduating from both literacy and nonformal education and training pro- grams. · Scale up formal and informal second-chance equivalence programs with clear links to the above-mentioned programs.To ensure cost-effectiveness, use the existing infrastructure of the education system at alternative hours (evenings, weekends) as much as possible, in order to allow young people to combine working and improving their education level. 116 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone The government should develop formal standards for training.The private sec- tor, NGOs, and donors should implement these interventions. Interventions with Higher Risks of Failure and Potential High Costs that Need to Be Implemented in the Short Term Certain short-term programs and policy interventions that can enhance labor market opportunities for young people have higher risks of failure and higher costs,but are nevertheless necessary given the Sierra Leonean context.Such inter- ventions include increasing access to financing for private sector employers and farmers and supporting self-employment and entrepreneurship for young people. APPROACH 1: HELP PRIVATE SECTOR EMPLOYERS (FORMAL AND INFORMAL BUSI- NESSES AS WELL AS FARMERS) INCREASE ACCESS TO FINANCING. Lack of access to credit is one of the main constraints to expanding businesses in Sierra Leone,where the microcredit system is only just emerging. If not well designed and monitored, microcredit programs tend to have relatively high failure rates. The approach proposed here includes improving access to credit and increasing financial literacy skills. Interventions include the following: · Develop credit schemes in both urban and rural areas to help employers sus- tain and expand employment through business growth. · Develop mechanisms to ensure participation in emerging credit schemes by young people while at the same time ensuring their financial reliability. · Pilot microcredit schemes, such as Grameen banks or other revolving group schemes. · Develop financial literacy and skills, including saving schemes. · Increase access to distance learning on the basic principles and practices of microcredit. The programs should be demand driven and target promising young entrepre- neurs.Policy makers should consider allowing NGOs to implement the programs, as they tend to be more effective than government in doing so. APPROACH 2: IMPROVE THE CHANCES FOR SUCCESSFUL SELF-EMPLOYMENT AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. The ability of self-employment and entrepreneurship programs to create sustainable employment is uncertain. However, given that self-employment and small-scale entrepreneurship represent the vast majority of employment in Sierra Leone, well-designed programs sup- porting these sectors could create significant employment opportunities for young people. Successful self-employed and entrepreneurial young people tend to have higher skill levels than the average population. Careful targeting and screening is therefore crucial to success and cost-effectiveness. Main Findings and Recommendations 117 Interventions include the following: · Support training providers in order to improve labor market links, training content, training delivery, and follow up. · Develop programs to support new entrants into the informal sector in iden- tifying viable business opportunities; developing sustainable business devel- opment plans; increasing access to microcredit; mentoring; and providing business follow up. · Develop programs to support university graduates entering the formal sector, with a focus on mentoring from the private sector,providing on-the-job train- ing, developing their managerial skills, and helping them understand national and international markets. These types of programs should focus on sectors with potential for growth,such as agroprocessing, retail trade, the emerging small-scale industrial mining sector, and small-scale tourism. They should be implemented by the private sector, national and international NGOs, and donors. Long-Term Interventions Serving theYoung People of Tomorrow Increasing access to quality primary and secondary education, including TVET, and developing specialized labor for sectors in need of high-skilled workers is crit- ical to improving employment opportunities for the young people of the future. Two approaches should be considered. APPROACH 1: INCREASE ACCESS TO AND THE QUALITY OF PRIMARY AND SEC- ONDARY EDUCATION. The recently published Education in Sierra Leone study (World Bank 2007a) develops detailed strategies for increasing access to and the quality of primary and secondary education. Doing so represents the number one priority in Sierra Leone for helping the young people of tomorrow.Worldwide experience has shown that keeping children in school is a cost-effective approach to developing skills that is more efficient than addressing low skill levels through sec- ond-chance education and skill development programs. One mechanism for keep- ing children in school is conditional cash transfers. The rapid increase in primary and secondary enrollment rates resulted in a sig- nificant increase in demand forTVET.Given its current low quality and high unit cost,TVET is in dire need of reform. Interventions forTVET include the following: · Increase public spending to align allocation with government policies of pri- oritizingTVET, as stated in the PRSP. · Develop a governance framework,such as a national training authority, bring- ing government and employers together in decision making and allocating public spending for TVET, to improve links to the market and efficiency. 118 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone · Develop a quality assurance framework to guide institutional efforts to improve quality, including developing occupational standards for skill development together with employers, strengthening preservice and in-service instructor training, reforming curricula, setting minimum standards and accreditation procedures, and developing monitoring mechanisms. · Develop incentives for improved performance of training institutions, such as performance-based budgeting, competitive procurement, and voucher systems. · Decentralize the management of TVET to improve its relevance and efficiency. The government should develop formal standards and provide oversight and limited financing.The private sector, donors, and NGOs should continue to pro- vide most of the training and financing. APPROACH 2: DEVELOP SPECIALIZED LABOR FOR SECTORS IN NEED OF HIGH- SKILLED LABOR. The lack of high-skilled labor limits opportunities for local own- ership in developing sectors such as large- and medium-scale mining,tourism,and agroindustries.Many highly specialized skills are not being taught at universities in Sierra Leone. Interventions to develop specialized labor for growing sectors in need of high- skilled labor include the following: · In the medium term, develop a specialized technology center (for mining, for example) directed and funded by the private sector, with some public support for training and dissemination of best practices. Expertise could be built through strong collaboration with a mining institute in, for example, South Africa. Students could receive on-the-job training in both Sierra Leone and South Africa. Other potential high-skilled specialties are in the information technology sector and agroindustries. · In the longer term, develop a partnership among the mining industry a uni- versity in, for example, South Africa and the University of Sierra Leone to develop a mining program at universities in Sierra Leone in order to decrease dependency on high-skilled foreign labor in the industrial mining sector.The partnership could include a satellite campus in South Africa as well as visiting professors and internships for students abroad and inside Sierra Leone.This approach also applies to other industries. · Develop exchange programs for the brightest students using a mechanism that involves their return to Sierra Leone.The fellowship programs offered should be in high-skilled sectors and meet the demands of the emerging pri- vate sector. Programs in Brazil, Chile, and Colombia could provide useful lessons for Sierra Leone. Main Findings and Recommendations 119 Getting the Environment Right to Benefit theYoung People of Today and Tomorrow Addressing constraints outside of the labor market,as well as rethinking the concept of young people in Sierra Leone,would improve the environment benefiting young people of today and tomorrow. The following two approaches should be considered: APPROACH 1: ADDRESS CONSTRAINTS OUTSIDE THE LABOR MARKET. Increasing employment opportunities for young people will require addressing constraints they face outside the labor market, including the limited capacity of the govern- ment to develop and implement sustainable employment programs for them and their limited access to land.The traditional landholding system in rural areas,com- bined with their lower levels of social capital, limits young people's access to land for sustainable employment beyond subsistence farming. Interventions to improve the capacity of the government to implement and coordinate sustainable employment policies and programs for young people include the following: · Provide technical assistance to the National Youth Commission to coordinate ongoing and planned sustainable employment programs, including a mecha- nism to involve all relevant ministries and provide technical assistance to key ministries such as the Ministry of Labor. · Provide technical assistance to national NGOs to improve the quality of skills training and the development of sustainable employment opportunities under the government's Youth Employment Scheme. Interventions to increase young people's access to rural land include the following: · Analyze land ownership and land distribution systems in rural areas and develop mechanisms to increase access to land by young people. · Increase the distribution of government-owned land to carefully selected young people,linking such distribution to efforts to improve their skills in agri- cultural activities. APPROACH 2: NARROW THE DEFINITION OF YOUNG PEOPLE. Sierra Leone's defi- nition of young people includes adolescents (15­19), youth (20­24), and young adults (25­35).These groups are in different stages in the transitions from childhood to adulthood and require different policy and programs.Young adults behave much like mature adults and face similar constraints and opportunities (with some excep- tions related to their lower level of social capital,which reduces their access to land, credit, and paid labor opportunities). In the short term, paying special attention to this group in light of their role in and the impact of the conflict on their develop- ing years is justified.In the longer term,while the government should address the 120 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone additional constraints young adults face, narrowing the definition of young people might lead to more focused and efficient programming.In the meantime,programs should differentiate across the three groups. Moving to Action: Developing an Efficient Investment Strategy to Promote Sustainable Employment forYoung People The following guiding principles should be followed to ensure that a combination of the proposed interventions leads to an efficient investment strategy for the sus- tainable employment of young people: · Set priorities in a resource-constrained environment. · Reallocate resources from ineffective programs toward proven successful approaches. · Ensure proper targeting in all programs. · Monitor and evaluate programs. · Ensure coordination among all relevant actors. Prioritize Policies and Programs Given the resource constraints in Sierra Leone,the government will have to pri- oritize the policies and programs it adopts for addressing sustainable employ- ment opportunities for the young people of today and tomorrow.The first set of actions proposed are programs that are most cost-effective and have been proven to work in other settings. In the long term, increasing the quality of and access to education should be a top priority. As for getting the environment right to benefit the young people of today and tomorrow, improving the capac- ity of the government to coordinate sustainable employment policies and pro- grams as well as increasing young people's access to land in rural areas should be top priorities. Reallocate Resources away from Ineffective Programs toward the Recommended Priority Actions Sierra Leone is already spending substantial resources on employment programs for young people.Traditional vocational training and training programs without clear links to the labor market have been shown to be ineffective (chapter 5). Many ongoing programs in Sierra Leone (and other developing countries) pro- vide short-term solutions,are economically unsound,and have neither clear exit strategies nor possibilities of sustainable employment for young people. In the short run, resources can be allocated away from such programs toward those that will have greater impacts for creating sustainable employment opportunities for young people. Main Findings and Recommendations 121 Ensure Proper Targeting of Beneficiaries in All Programs Sustainable employment programs require much greater attention to targeting. In order to allocate scarce resources effectively, policy makers and practitioners need to know whom they are targeting. Research shows that the most cost-effective strategies for sustainable employment address the specific needs of a particular con- stellation of young people (World Bank 2008b).Especially given the broad defini- tion of young people in Sierra Leone, which includes people at different stages of their lives,with different priorities and needs,careful targeting is crucial.Programs should also differentiate clearly between skilled and unskilled young people,urban and rural residents, and men and women.Attention should also be paid to young people who are truly inactive, disabled, or living on the street. Programs should develop strong screening mechanisms to ensure that beneficiaries are the appro- priate target group of every program. Monitor Programs and Evaluate a Small Set of Promising Programs Knowledge of the impact and cost-effectiveness of sustainable employment inter- ventions for young people is very limited in Sierra Leone, as in other developing countries.To increase the knowledge base, the government, in coordination with donors and NGOs, should ensure that programs include results-based monitoring indicators and that key pilot programs are formally evaluated. Coordinate Relevant Actors and Draw on Their Comparative Advantages Developing and implementing a successful employment strategy for young peo- ple involves a wide set of actors.It is essential to understand the comparative advan- tage of each (World Bank 2008b).While the Ministry of Education,Youth and Sports can play a coordinating role, other key ministries, such as the ministries of labor, agriculture, and food security (agriculture is the most promising sector to provide jobs in the short term); public works, housing, and technical maintenance (public sector work schemes provide another promising approach for short-term employment of young people); and trade and industry (given the relevance of the private sector) should be involved. The emerging private sector is a source for employment, on-the-job training, and mentors, as well as financial and human resources for providing promising young people with opportunities and skills (World Bank 2008b). NGOs and donors are an important source of services for employment. The government should focus on coordinating a strategy for sustainable employment opportunities and providing limited financial incentives,while relying on NGOs,donors,and the private sector for financial resources and service delivery. Strengthening relation- ships with the private sector and NGOs will increase the resources available for 122 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone service provision, employment opportunities, and the monitoring and evaluation of impact (World Bank 2008b). Both the government and the donor community have demonstrated that the sustainable employment of young people is a priority for them.This report shows that a successful strategy for improving sustainable employment for Sierra Leone's young people involves a wide range of program and policy interventions as well as actors. Developing and implementing an effective strategy will be a challenging endeavor for both the government and the donor community.It is hoped that this report assists policy makers in finding the right answers. Note 1. Employers identify domestic competition,weak demand for products,and lack of access to electricity and financing as major constraints for business development. Appendix A TheTransition from School toWork Appendix A.1 Youth Employment Statistics Table A1.1 Time Use, by Demographic Group (percent) Characteristic 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 15­65 Male Employed 9.2 21.8 39.1 73.7 86.8 62.5 Unemployed 1.3 1.0 4.4 5.2 1.9 2.9 Work and school 1.8 2.3 1.4 0.1 0.2 0.8 School 78.1 64.1 31.2 4.8 0.2 19.3 Out of the labor force 9.5 10.9 23.9 16.2 10.9 11.0 Labor force participation 12.4 25.0 44.9 79.0 88.9 66.1 Female Employed 13.5 34.0 58.0 77.6 75.7 65.5 Unemployed 0.3 2.1 2.9 1.5 0.6 1.5 Work and school 2.1 1.2 0.5 0.1 0 0.3 School 73.4 45.0 15.5 1.2 0.04 11.0 Out of the labor force 10.8 17.7 23.2 19.5 23.7 21.7 Labor force participation 15.9 37.3 61.3 79.3 76.3 67.3 Urban Employed 3.7 13.9 32.6 65.3 77.5 52.3 Unemployed 1.4 3.2 6.2 6.3 2.7 4.5 Work and school 1.4 1.1 0.4 0.3 0.03 0.4 School 87.6 68.3 30.5 3.5 0.08 20.8 Out of the labor force 5.9 13.6 30.3 24.7 19.7 22.0 Labor force participation 6.4 18.1 39.2 71.8 80.2 57.2 (continued) 123 124 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table A1.1 (Continued) Characteristic 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 15­65 Rural Employed 16.0 39.3 68.7 83.6 83.3 72.6 Unemployed 0.5 0.3 0.7 0.7 0.4 0.5 Work and school 2.3 2.2 1.4 0.02 0.1 0.6 School 68.5 43.2 13.6 2.1 0.1 10.5 Out of the labor force 12.7 15.0 15.7 13.6 16.1 15.8 Labor force participation 18.8 41.8 70.7 84.3 83.8 73.7 Total Employed 11.3 28.01 49.4 76.1 81.1 64.1 Unemployed 0.9 1.5 3.6 3.0 1.3 2.2 Work and school 1.9 1.7 0.9 0.1 0.1 0.5 School 75.9 54.4 22.6 2.7 0.1 14.8 Out of the labor force 10.1 14.4 23.5 18.2 17.4 18.4 Labor force participation 14.0 31.3 53.9 79.2 82.5 66.8 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Table A1.2 Number of Months Unemployed Workers Spend Searching for Work, by Age Less than 3­6 6­12 12­24 More than Age 3 months months months months 24 months 15­19 0 1 20.6 20.2 46.9 20­24 0 2.4 5.3 25 61.7 25­35 6.6 1 10.4 18.1 64 35­65 0 0 0 3.1 96.9 Total 2.65 2 7.5 16.1 69.3 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Table A1.3 Share of the Labor Force Working Full Time, by Demographic Group (percent) Group 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 15­65 Male 61.6 76.3 83.9 87.1 86.7 76.4 Female 58.9 74 70.3 72.9 72.6 61.8 Urban 53.5 77.4 76.2 81.5 82 72.3 Rural 61 74.2 74.7 76.7 78.9 65.8 Total 60.1 74.2 75.2 70.6 80 68 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. TheTransition from School toWork 125 Table A1.4 Share of Working Labor Force That Would Like to Work More Hours, by Demographic Group (percent) Group 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 15­65 Male 9.2 17.7 21.8 23.1 18.9 20.3 Female 8.2 19.2 17.3 16.2 12.6 15.3 Urban 5.6 17.4 21.7 18.5 16.0 17.6 Rural 9.0 19.0 17.5 19.1 15.9 17.5 Total 8.6 18.6 18.9 18.9 15.9 17.5 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Table A1.5 Type of Employment, by Demographic Group (percent) Group 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 15­65 Paid employee Male 1.6 14.1 13.4 20.6 16.4 8.2 Female 2.0 1.3 6.7 6.0 5.3 1.6 Urban 4.8 16.0 23.7 32.1 25.7 12.2 Rural 1.1 0.9 1.9 40.1 2.7 1.0 Total 1.8 5.9 9.2 13.6 10.2 4.1 Self-employed Male 37.0 37.0 56.8 55.8 53.0 37.0 Female 27.7 40.9 44.3 51.3 44.9 35.0 Urban 40.7 51.3 51.7 52.1 51.2 47.7 Rural 28.9 33.6 47.6 54.5 47.2 32.2 Total 31.2 39.5 49.0 53.6 48.5 35.7 Unpaid Male 61.4 48.9 29.9 23.6 30.7 54.8 Female 70.3 57.8 48.1 42.7 49.8 63.4 Urban 54.5 32.7 24.7 15.8 23.1 40.1 Rural 70.1 65.5 50.5 41.4 50.2 67.8 Total 66.9 54.6 41.8 32.8 41.3 60.2 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Table A1.6 Share of Labor Force Population in Formal Employment, by Demographic Group (percent) Group 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 15­65 Male 0.6 1.2 6.2 10.6 19.5 14.2 Female 0.0 0.8 1.0 5.9 5.5 4.7 Urban 2.3 4.1 8.1 20.2 30.9 22.9 Rural 0.0 0.2 0.2 1.2 3.5 2.0 Total 0.3 1.0 2.9 7.7 12.7 8.8 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. 126 Table A1.7 Sector of Employment, by Demographic Group (percent) Male Female Sector 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 15­65 9­14 15­19 20­24 25­35 36­65 15­65 Agriculture 94.9 84.3 68.5 63.9 63.6 65.8 88.4 82.5 71.8 72.2 73.9 73.8 Forestry 0 0 0 0.7 0.3 0.3 0.4 0 0.3 0 0 0.1 Fishing 0 0 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.4 0 0 0.2 0 0.1 0.1 Mining 1.4 2.7 4.3 3.6 2.5 3.0 0 0 0.3 0.2 0 0.1 Manufacturing 1.7 3.0 3.3 4.9 2.9 3.5 0 0.1 0.6 1.6 0.9 1.0 Construction 0 0.9 5.5 3.6 3.1 3.3 0 0 0 0 0 0 Wholesale and retail 1.5 5.6 9.7 10.4 6.3 7.8 11.3 14.1 23.2 18.9 18.1 18.7 Services 0.6 3.6 8.4 12.5 20.9 15.9 0 3.2 3.8 7.3 6.9 6.3 Urban Rural Agriculture 44.6 36.9 28.6 25.9 24.9 26.4 91.3 83.2 70.6 69.0 68.6 70.3 Forestry 0 0 0.3 0.1 0 0.1 0.2 0 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.2 Fishing 0 0 0.4 0 0.5 0.3 0 0 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.2 Mining 0 2.8 1.5 3.1 2.7 2.7 0.6 1.0 1.7 1.5 1.3 1.4 Manufacturing 0 5.6 2.8 7.1 4.5 5.3 0.8 1.2 1.6 2.8 1.9 2.1 Construction 0 1.7 5.9 3.3 4.2 3.9 0 0.3 2.0 1.4 1.6 1.4 Wholesale and retail 53.2 39.9 45.1 36.4 29.3 34.3 6.8 10.9 18.3 15.7 12.0 13.9 Services 2.2 13.2 15.4 24.2 34.0 27.1 0.3 3.4 5.4 9.3 14.1 10.5 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. TheTransition from School toWork 127 Appendix A.2 Regression Estimates of Labor Force Status Table A2.1 Probability of Being Unemployed Characteristic (1) (2) (3) Adolescent (15­19) ­0.0031 ­0.00074 ­0.0029 Youth (20­24) 0.0073** 0.015*** 0.0058** Young adult (25­34) 0.0047** 0.0078*** 0.0041 1­3 years primary education 0.0061** 0.0043 4­6 years primary education 0.0082 0.0047 Some junior-secondary education 0.14*** 0.0068** Some senior-secondary education 0.04*** 0.024*** Higher education ­0.0002 ­0.0033 Male 0.0035 0.0073*** Urban 0.012*** Sample size 12,165 12,165 12,165 Adjusted R2 0.0568 0.0183 0.0709 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:Table reports marginal effects of probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if respondent is unemployed and a value of 0 if respondent is not. ***Significant at the 1 percent level;** significant at the 5 percent level;* significant at the 10 percent level. 128 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table A2.2 Probability of Being in the Labor Force Characteristic (1) (2) Migrated back to village of birth ­0.018 Migrant ­0.022 Young migrant (15­24) (returned to village of birth and other migrants) 0.102*** Young adult migrant (25­34) (returned to village of birth and other migrants) 0.059*** Adolescent (15­19) ­0.33*** Youth (20­24) ­0.124*** Young adult (25­34) 0.041*** 1­3 years primary education 0.033*** ­0.28*** 4­6 years primary education 0.03*** ­0.26*** Some junior-secondary education 0.10*** ­0.29*** Some senior-secondary education 0.33*** ­0.29*** Higher education 0.73*** ­0.19*** Male 0.058*** Urban 0.037*** 0.012 Rural female 0.011*** Northern region 0.015 Southern region ­0.057*** Eastern region ­0.013 Working household head 0.17*** Household head 0.19*** 0.21*** Sample size 8,829 12,165 Adjusted R2 0.4995 0.2161 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:Table reports marginal effects of probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if the respondent is employed or unemployed and a value of 0 if he or she is out of the labor force. ***Significant at the 1 percent level. TheTransition from School toWork 129 Table A2.3 Probability of Holding a Formal Sector Job Variable (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Adolescent (15­19) ­0.06*** ­0.052*** ­0.014*** ­0.016*** ­0.0066* Youth (20­24) ­0.044*** ­0.037*** ­0.013*** ­0.015*** ­0.0072*** Young adult (25­34) ­0.022*** ­0.013*** ­0.012*** ­0.015*** ­0.0067*** 1­3 years primary education 0.062*** 0.069*** 0.034*** 4­6 years primary education 0.06*** 0.071*** 0.03*** Some junior-secondary education 0.5*** 0.21*** 0.1*** Some senior-secondary education 0.19*** 0.21*** 0.32*** Higher education 0.081*** 0.84*** 0.69*** Male 0.062*** 0.014*** 0.0069*** Urban 0.03*** Migrated back to village of birth ­0.0079*** Migrant 0.0057** Working household head ­0.0049 Household head 0.0087*** Sample size 8,829 8,829 8,829 8,829 8,829 Adjusted R2 0.0302 0.0704 0.467 0.4607 0.5125 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:Table reports marginal effects of probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if the respondent works in a job that pays labor benefits and a value if 0 if the respondent works in a job that does not pay benefits. ***Significant at the 1 percent level;** significant at the 5 percent level;* significant at the 10 percent level. 130 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table A2.4 Probability of Holding a Paying Job Variable (1) (2) Adolescent (15­19) ­0.28*** ­0.25*** Youth (20­24) ­0.18*** ­0.17*** Young adult (25­34) ­0.07*** ­0.08*** 1­3 years primary education 0.086** 4­6 years primary education 0.13*** Some junior-secondary education 0.22*** Some senior-secondary education 0.36*** Higher education 0.38*** Sample size 8,829 8,701 Adjusted R2 0.0228 0.3765 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:Table reports marginal effects of probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if the respondent earns a wage, salary, or profits and a value of 0 if he or she is unpaid. ***Significant at the 1 percent level;** significant at the 5 percent level;* significant at the 10 percent level. Table A2.5 Probability of Holding a Wage-Paying Job Variable (1) (2) Adolescent (15­19) ­0.65*** ­0.023*** Youth (20­24) ­0.41*** ­0.017*** Young adult (25­34) ­0.022*** ­0.019*** 1­3 years primary education 0.08*** 4­6 years primary education 0.11*** Some junior-secondary education 0.21*** Some senior-secondary education 0.53*** Higher education 0.82*** Sample size 8,829 8,701 Adjusted R2 0.0214 0.3765 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:Table reports marginal effects of probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if the respondent earns a wage or salary and a value of 0 if he or she earns profits (that is, is self- employed). ***Significant at the 1 percent level;** significant at the 5 percent level;* significant at the 10 percent level. TheTransition from School toWork 131 Table A2.6 Probability of Being Employed in the Agricultural Sector Variable (1) Adolescent (15­19) ­0.028 Youth (20­24) ­0.065*** Young adult (25­34) ­0.029*** 1­3 years primary education ­0.069** 4­6 years primary education ­0.14*** Some junior-secondary education ­0.31*** Some senior-secondary education ­0.47*** Higher education ­0.68*** Male 0.015 Urban ­0.5*** Migrated back to village of birth 0.13*** Migrant ­0.15*** Working household head 0.18*** Household head ­0.072*** Sample size 8,995 Adjusted R2 0.4094 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:Table reports marginal effects of probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if the respondent works in agriculture and 0 if he or she works in any other sector. ***Significant at the 1 percent level; ** significant at the 5 percent level; * significant at the 10 percent level. 132 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table A2.7 Probability of Being Employed in the Service Sector Item Probability Adolescent (15­19) ­0.0081 Youth (20­24) ­0.011** Young adult (25­34) ­0.0097*** 1­3 years primary education 0.046*** 4­6 years primary education 0.037*** Some junior-secondary education 0.11*** Some senior-secondary education 0.3*** Higher education 0.66*** Male 0.011** Urban 0.062*** Migrated back to village of birth ­0.021*** Migrant 0.012*** Working household head 0.002 Household head 0.016*** Sample size 8,829 Adjusted R2 0.4119 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:Table reports marginal effects of probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if the respondent works in the service industry and a value of 0 if he or she works in any other sector. ***Significant at the 1 percent level; ** significant at the 5 percent level; *significant at the 10 percent level. TheTransition from School toWork 133 Table A2.8 Probability of Being Employed in the Trade Sector Item Probability Adolescent (15­19) 0.021 Youth (20­24) 0.041*** Young adult (25­34) 0.021*** 1­3 years primary education 0.0017 4­6 years primary education 0.044*** Some junior-secondary education 0.057*** Some senior-secondary education 0.0034 Higher education ­0.061*** Male ­0.098*** Urban 0.26*** Migrated back to village of birth ­0.043*** Migrant 0.03*** Working household head ­0.077*** Household head 0.029*** Sample size 8,829 Adjusted R2 0.2606 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2004 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey. Note:Table reports marginal effects of probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if the respondent works in the trade sector and a value of 0 if he or she works in any other sector. *** Significant at the 1 percent level; ** significant at the 5 percent level; * significant at the 10 percent level. Appendix B Labor Market Demand Appendix B.1 Methodology of the Employers Survey The main objectives of the Sierra Leone Employers Survey (SLES) were to identify skill needs in the labor market and determine if young people are particularly disadvantaged in the labor market. The survey included two complementary questionnaires: one for formal and informal businesses in urban areas, and one for farms in rural areas.The survey included 10 sections: registration; general information about the business/farm;financing;business environment;information on employees;hiring and payment policies;employers'perception of workers;train- ing; income, sales, and expenditures; and information on the owner, manager, and employees. Geographic Coverage National coverage of the SLES was not possible because of budget constraints.The survey was carried out in five districts: Western Urban, Western Rural, Bo, Bombali/Makeni, and Kailahun.The five districts were chosen according to sev- eral criteria.They were chosen to reflect as much as possible differences related to location within Sierra Leone and to include one district from each of the four regions (eastern,southern,northern,and western).With the exception of the east- ern region, for each region the district with the most businesses was chosen based on the Census of Business Establishments carried out by Statistics Sierra Leone in 2005.1 For the eastern region, although the Kenema district has the most busi- nesses, businesses there face issues similar to those faced by businesses in Bombali/Makeni (consultations with Statistics Sierra Leone).Kailahun was there- fore chosen in order to include a poorer district (Kailahun is the third-poorest dis- trict in the country and the poorest district in the eastern region,according to the 135 136 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey 2003/2004).The areas chosen also reflect different crops. Kailahun is especially important for rice, coffee, and cacao, while Bo has more palm oil and groundnuts (Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey 2003/2004). Sample Frames For businesses in urban areas,the 2005 Census of Business Establishments was used as the sample frame.The census contains all of the businesses in Sierra Leone with fixed addresses. Out of 10,840 records, 7,076 are in the five regional districts cho- sen, among which 35 percent are registered with a government authority and as such are considered formal. The sample frame for farms was a computer file developed by merging two files extracted from the Sierra Leone 2004 Population and Housing Census.The first was an individual-level file with the 136,400 uniquely identified heads of households in the five districts under study who reported farm-related activities as their main economic activity.2 The second was a household-level file with 320,352 uniquely identified households, with information on the number of acres under different kinds of crops (rice, cassava, potato, groundnut, maize, coffee, cacao, oil palm, citrus, and vegetables).3 The resulting sample frame included 125,013 farms.4 Stratification Nonfarm businesses were stratified into four groups: large businesses (50 employ- ees or more), medium-size businesses (10­49 employees), small formal businesses (fewer than 10 employees), and small informal businesses (fewer than 10 employ- ees). Farms were stratified into four size groups depending on the total crop area: large farms (500 acres or more), medium-size farms (100­499 acres), small farms (20­99 acres), and very small farms (less than 20 acres). Population Size, Sample Size, and Sampling Strategy For businesses a systematic equal-probability sample was taken within each stra- tum.The sample frames were sorted by district and industrial sector in order to implicitly stratify the sample according to these criteria within each explicit stratum.5 Given the small numbers of large and medium-size businesses, all of these firms were surveyed.While two-thirds of small businesses in Sierra Leone are informal, half of the small firms in the sample are formal and the other half are informal. The oversampling of formal firms was done to ensure a large enough sample size for the intended analytics.The less than representative sam- ple of informal small firms does not present a problem, because the firms are sufficiently heterogeneous that the sample provides adequate information about small informal firms. Labor Market Demand 137 Weighting Of the 847 surveys in the business sample, 668 were correctly completed.The adjusted sampling weights were used to calculate totals (table B1.1).Unfortunately, the sampling frame from the 2004 Census later appeared to have reported unreli- able data about acreage.The total for farms was calculated without using weights. Table B1.1 Population and Sample Size, Sampling Fraction, and Sampling Weight Number of Adjusted Population Sample Sampling Sampling completed sampling Type of business size size fraction weights surveys weight Large 35 35 1 1 24 1.458333333 Medium 193 193 1 1 158 1.221518987 Small (formal) 2,424 309 0.12747 7.844 244 9.93442623 Small (informal) 3,913 310 0.079223 12.622 242 16.16942149 Total 6,566 847 n.a. n.a. 668 n.a. Source: Authors. n.a. Not applicable. 138 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Appendix B.2 Regression Estimates Formal and Informal Businesses Table B2.1 Employer Preferences for Hiring Older Workers Employer or enterprise characteristic Coefficient estimate Employer characteristic Under 35 ­2.387*** Male ­0.6368 Primary education ­1.661 Junior-secondary education 1.227 Senior-secondary education ­0.7921 Higher education 1.6705 Enterprise characteristic Formal 2.317*** Agriculture 0.869 Manufacturing ­1.652 Services 0.3771 Other sector 4.037*** Located in Bo ­2.495** Located in Kailahun ­3.003* Located in Makeni 0.6459 Constant 28.7817 Sample size 586 R2 0.0913 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Estimates are based on ordinary least squares regression in which the dependent variable is the age of the employee. ***Significant at the 1 percent level; ** significant at the 5 percent level; * significant at the 10 percent level. Labor Market Demand 139 Table B2.2 Probability of Hiring a New Employee in the Past Year Characteristic Probability Employer characteristic Under 35 0.0311 No education ­0.0892*** Primary education 0.0059 Junior-secondary education ­0.995 Male 0.0736 Enterprise characteristic Large 0.7455*** Medium-size 0.4052*** Formal ­0.0368 Agriculture ­0.0679 Tourism ­0.0437 Manufacturing 0.0017 Services 0.1415** Health 0.2918* Education 0.3093* Other sector 0.1796 Located in Bo 0.1102** Located in Kailahun 0.2727 Located in Makeni 0.0123 Sample size 445 Adjusted R2 0.2080 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Estimates are based on probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if interviewee hired a new employee in the past year and 0 if he or she did not. For educa- tion, the omitted value is senior-secondary and higher education. For location, the omitted value isWestern urban and rural. For size of firm, the omitted value is small firms. For sector, the omit- ted value is trade. ***Significant at the 1 percent level; ** significant at the 5 percent level; * significant at the 10 percent level. 140 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table B2.3 Probability of Providing Formal Training to Employees Characteristic Probability Employer characteristic Under 35 ­0.0039 No education 0.0145 Primary education 0.0237 Junior-secondary education ­0.0162 Male 0.0205 Enterprise characteristic Large 0.2059** Medium-size 0.0815* Formal ­0.0094 Agriculture ­0.0106 Tourism ­0.0144 Manufacturing ­0.0014 Services ­0.0121 Education ­0.0051 Other sector ­0.0055 Located in Bo 0.0646** Located in Kailahun 0.0330 Located in Makeni 0.0075 Sample size 426 Adjusted R2 0.1480 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Estimates are based on probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if the firm provided formal training to employees and a value of 0 if it did not. For education, the omitted value is senior-secondary and higher education. For location, the omitted value isWestern urban and rural. For size of firm, the omitted value is small firms. For sector, the omitted value is trade. *** Significant at the 1 percent level; ** significant at the 5 percent level; * significant at the 10 percent level. Labor Market Demand 141 Table B2.4 Probability of Willingness to Pay for Training Employees Characteristic Probability Employer characteristic Under 35 ­0.0836** No education 0.0416 Primary education ­0.0770 Junior-secondary education 0.0086 Male 0.0484 Enterprise characteristic Large 0.3759*** Medium-size 0.3938 Formal ­0.0380 Agriculture ­0.0873 Tourism ­0.0202 Manufacturing ­0.0372 Services 0.0757 Health 0.2919** Education 0.2099* Other sector 0.0380 Located in Bo 0.3329*** Located in Kailahun 0.4392*** Located in Makeni 0.1237 Sample size 439 Adjusted R2 0.1671 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Estimates are based on probit regression in which the dependent variables takes a value of 1 if the firm paid to train an employee and 0 if it did not. For education, the omitted value is the senior-secondary and higher education. For location, the omitted value isWestern urban and rural. For size of firm, the omitted value is small firms. For sector, the omitted value is trade ***Significant at the 1 percent level; ** significant at the 5 percent level; * significant at the 10 percent level. 142 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Table B2.5 Probability of Providing Formal Training to Farm Employees Characteristic Probability Education/gender of employer Koranic 0.0053 Primary 0.0112 Junior-secondary 0.0545 Senior-secondary ­0.0050 Higher education 0.2254*** Male 0.0035 Farm size/location Large 0.3460*** Medium-size 0.0947*** Located in Bo ­0.0225 Located in Kailahun 0.0332 Located in Makeni ­0.0042 Sample size 0.3088 Adjusted R2 296 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Estimates are based on probit regression in which the dependent variable takes a value of 1 if the farm owner provided formal training to employees and a value of 0 if he or she did not.For education,the omit- ted value is no education.For location,the omitted value isWestern urban and rural.For size of farm,the omitted value is small farms. ***Significant at the 1 percent level; ** significant at the 5 percent level; * significant at the 10 percent level. Labor Market Demand 143 Table B2.6 Probability of Willingness to Pay for Training Farm Employees Characteristic Probability Education/gender of employer Koranic ­0.0842 Primary ­0.9890 Junior-secondary 0.0558 Senior-secondary 0.0423 Higher 0.0293 Male 0.0386 Farm size/location Large 0.2459*** Medium-size 0.1478*** Located in Bo 0.0260 Located in Kailahun 0.2561** Located in Makeni ­0.0487 Sample size 340 Adjusted R2 0.1599 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Estimates are based on probit regression in which the dependent variables takes a value of 1 if the farm owner paid to train an employee and 0 if he or she did not. For education, the omitted value is no education. For location, the omitted value isWestern urban and rural. For size of farm, the omitted value is small farms. ***Significant at the 1 percent level; ** significant at the 5 percent level; *significant at the 10 percent level. 144 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Appendix B.3 Constraints to Daily Business Operation and Growth Table B3.1 Constraints to Daily Business Operation and Growth, as Reported by Employers Among top three constraints for daily operation/among top three constraints for growth/ percent of employers evaluating as a major problem Constraint Large Medium Small Formal Informal Domestic competition 1--2 33 2--5 33 1--5 43 1--3 43 1--4 37 Demand for product 4--5 17 3 17 2--3 27 3--2 28 2--6 20 Access to electricity 2--3 57 1--2 63 3--2 54 2--1 55 3--2 57 Access to financing 4 43 6--1 24 4--1 44 4--4 35 5--1 50 Crime, theft, and disorder 37 17 5 23 5 21 4 25 Macroeconomic instability 6 27 27 6--6 32 6­6 32 5 29 Rent 27 4 35 4 47 5 45 3 42 Access to basic tools and equipment 17 4 20 11 11 6 18 Cost of fuel 1 43 5--6 43 24 33 21 Access to water 3 17 16 9 12 9 Access to advanced technology 33 3 21 10 13 13 Availability of skilled labor 5 7 10 2 5 3 Cost of financing 5 33 17 16 18 15 Restrictive labor regulations 6 7 4 7 5 7 Cost of labor 27 10 6 7 7 Cost of food for workers 17 6 3 4 5 Quality of water supply 23 14 9 11 10 Family pressure 7 10 29 19 35 Land ownership 3 14 19 16 20 Corruption 23 12 12 13 11 Restrictive business regulations 23 5 13 13 10 Access to roads 7 3 3 2 6 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Employers were asked "what are the three main problems that you have for the daily operation of your business?What are the three main problems that you have for growth and expansion of your business? Please tell us if any of the following issues are a problem for the operation of your business. If an issue poses a problem, please tell us whether it is a minor, moderate, or major problem." Labor Market Demand 145 Table B3.2 Constraints to Daily Business Operation and Growth, as Reported by Farm Owners Among top three constraints for daily operation/among top three constraints for growth/ percent of employers evaluating as a major problem Constraint Total Large Medium Small Pests 1--4 74 1--4 85 1--5 77 1--6 69 Access to financing 2--1 85 2--1 90 3--1 85 2--1 84 Cost of food for workers 3 69 3 76 2 66 3--4 70 Cost of labor 4--5 60 4--2 63 5 56 4--3 64 Access to basic tools and 5--2 73 5--3 66 4--2 69 6 78 equipment Access to advanced 6--6 55 6 42 6--4 62 5 53 technology Access to seeds --3 64 78 --3 59 --2 65 Access to fertilizers 68 73 --6 61 --5 72 Family pressure 24 --5 20 21 28 Domestic competition 8 --5 5 6 11 Availability of unskilled labor 17 17 11 21 Availability of skilled labor 19 20 18 20 Access to storage facilities 50 54 46 52 Quality of roads 41 49 41 40 Cost of financing 41 63 37 40 Macroeconomic instability 39 49 36 40 Access to support services 37 51 37 31 Access to other domestic 32 22 33 34 market Crime, theft, and disorder 32 22 30 37 Access to feeder roads 29 27 21 36 Access to roads 27 29 22 31 Access to local market 22 34 15 25 Quality of water 21 34 20 19 Access to communication 19 24 11 25 Access to electricity 16 7 11 23 Corruption 14 27 15 10 Access to water 12 20 11 10 Land ownership 6 2 3 9 Source: Authors' calculation based on the 2006 Sierra Leone Employers Survey. Note: Farm owners were asked:"What are the three main problems that you have for the daily opera- tion of your business?What are the three main problems that you have for growth and expansion of your business? Please tell us if any of the following issues are a problem for the operation of your business. If an issue poses a problem, please tell us whether it is a minor, moderate or major problem." 146 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Notes 1. The Census of Business Establishments, carried out in September 2005 by Statistics Sierra Leone, defined an establishment as an economic unit engaged in one or pre- dominantly one kind of economic activity at a single physical location.This definition excludes all mobile roadside/street traders with no fixed location. 2. The main activity of 94 percent of the household heads in the file is crop farming. The remaining 6 percent are engaged in the livestock,poultry,forestry,or mining and quar- rying sectors. 3. The original files obtained from the National Statistical Agency were somewhat larger (about 139,000 individual-level records and 330,000 household-level records). However,some of the records had to be dropped because they had duplicate identifiers (most of them were actually duplicate records). 4. Farms are, therefore, implicitly defined as "households with a farmer head." The oper- ational definition of the concept based on the matching of datasets is vulnerable to imperfections in the record identifiers (11,384 farmers from the individual-level file did not find a matching record in the household-level file).The assumption is made here that these imperfections are stochastically unrelated to the survey subject matter and, therefore, not a source of selection bias. 5. The industrial sectors identified in the sample frame are retail trade (2,881 employers); wholesale trade (355);other community,social,and personal service activities (313);health and social work (132); sales, maintenance, and repair of motor vehicles (106); transport, storage,and communication (105);hotels and restaurants (95);manufacturing (85);finan- cial intermediation services (banks,insurance companies,and so forth) (45);construction (41); automotive fuel (31); education (31); electricity, gas, and water supply (24); crop farming (23); mining and quarrying (22); livestock (15); public administration, defense, social security, and so forth (14); real estate, renting, and business activities (13); forestry (6); nonclassified (5); poultry (5); and fishing (3). Appendix C International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone Selected International and National Youth Employment Programs This appendix presents a selection of programs for youth skills development and employment that provide relevant experiences and lessons for Sierra Leone.1 It also includes an overview of youth employment programs in Sierra Leone. TheYoung Entrepreneurs' Qualification Program in Peru The Programa de Calificación de Jóvenes Creadores de Microempresas is imple- mented by the Peruvian NGO Colectivo Integral de Desarrollo.2 It started in 1999 to counteract the significant lack of entrepreneurial skills among young people.The objective of the program is to improve the earnings and quality of life of beneficiaries by providing assistance and training in the development of business plans and the creation of profitable businesses.The target population consists of economically disadvantaged people 15­25 in certain areas of Peru who have entrepreneurial skills or own a small or informal business that has been in operation less than a year. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION. The main features of the program include the following: · Diffusion and registration process:A massive advertising campaign was waged to publicize the program. · Training during the screening process (or prebusiness creation services):All regis- tered participants received training, which focused on the creation of business plans as well as individual counseling. · Selection of beneficiaries: A jury--composed of successful entrepreneurs, uni- versity professors, and specialists--selected the projects or business plans that 147 148 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone promised the highest profits and appeared most feasible.The competition represented a difficult hurdle for many participants, very few of whom subsequently presented proposals. · Services after the selection process (or postbusiness creation services): Services included training, counseling, and internships. In this stage training played a key role by preparing participants in building action plans in accordance with their business plan. Action plans helped participants and tutors iden- tify and quantify the need for credit and establish the areas where assistance was most needed. Subsequent training encompassed courses in accounting, taxes,financial management,and sales strategies.Internships were carried out in private firms and lasted 170 hours. Loans were provided by an external financial institution. PROGRAM IMPACT. Impact estimates based on experimental data four months after the end of the program suggest a 7.8 percentage point increase in the proba- bility of having a business operating and an 8 percent increase in beneficiaries'aver- age income.Estimates based on quasiexperimental data show an increase of almost 40 percentage points in the probability of operating the business for more than a year and a 40 percentage point increase in earnings.An important secondary effect was on job generation, with beneficiaries employing 17.3 percent more workers than the control group (interested but nonenrolled peers). Although evaluations have not produced cost-benefit estimates, the program seems to yield positive net gains. Further evaluation and follow-up is needed to monitor the success of the program over a longer time period (at least two years). Regarding its replication in other localities, increasing the program's scale may hamper its effectiveness, which relies to a great extent on personalized service. Entrepreneurship Programs with Focus on RuralYouth A number of entrepreneurship programs focus on reaching rural young people.They focus on trying to improve skills in agriculture or natural resource-related areas.3 BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA: YOUTH PROMOTION PROJECT. The Swiss Coop- eration Office designed a project to foster rural youth entrepreneurship in a post- conflict setting.The program aims at increasing the attractiveness of life in rural areas and decreasing pressure for migration.It offers training in specific agriculture fields; assists young people in selected agricultural sectors, especially the fruit and vegetable sector; and facilitates the establishment of small farms. GTZ has imple- mented the program since 2003, assisting rural inhabitants 19­25 in six villages in the Banja Luka andTuzla regions of Bosnia Herzegovina. THE PHILIPPINES: FARM YOUTH DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM. The Farm Youth Development Program (FYDP) is a government program aiming to counteract youth unemployment and skills shortages in rural areas. The program targets International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 149 Filipinos 15­24, offering training on integrated farming, entrepreneurial and cooperative management skills, and other activities, including international exchange programs and demonstration farms. A livelihood support program, provided through the Department of Agriculture's National Agriculture and Fishery Council, focuses on microenterprise and minienterprise projects with credit assistance. Between 1989 and 1992, 2,436 young people were trained and 156 microenterprises in 78 regions given financial support. KENYA: PROJECT BAOBAB. Project Baobab is a nonprofit organization that has taught young people skills for economic independence through six partner sec- ondary schools since 2000. It targets young low-income rural residents, mainly women, providing free business skills training (entrepreneurship and life-skills training) and small grants for business start-ups for some of those who are trained in secondary schools and vocational centers. The project's main components include the following: · Life skills: Courses,introduced in the third year of secondary school,foster self- confidence and openness to express ideas before a group. · Entrepreneurial skills: Courses, introduced in the fourth year of secondary school, provide training in job readiness, business planning, and development skills. Students create individual business plans that focus on enterprises such as secondhand clothes sales, bee or chicken raising, and tailoring. · Start-up loans: Students submit business plans to a committee from the local business community.The most promising enterprises are recommended as candidates for start-up loans from Project Baobab. Each year in each partner school, three to four grants of $100 each are awarded to students with out- standing business plans. A gross impact evaluation shows that between 2000 and 2004 about half of the grantees were running businesses with marginal to good success.About 20 percent of the businesses were not operating (the business had failed or the individual had dropped out of school). Microcredit Scheme forYoung People in India The CommonwealthYouth Credit Initiative (CYCI) in India is a small enterprise scheme for unemployed young people involving microcredit,training,and enterprise development.4 The scheme aims to create employment opportunities by providing low-cost, easily accessible credit to establish successful businesses and training in financial and enterprise management.The program also increases the knowledge of young people and youth-related organizations in the operation and management of credit programs. Services are provided through low interest rates, low training costs, partnership with NGOs, and ongoing training and monitoring of enterprises.The focus is on 150 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone developing capacity for enterprise management,a prerequisite for self-employment. The program has three stages: · Stage I: Precredit (community outreach support system and identification and selection of participants) · Stage II: Capacity building (group formation, basic credit management, and entrepreneurship training) · Stage III: Credit delivery and support (credit dispersion, credit management system, post-training support for growth and expansion, and relending). The CYCI was designed by the Commonwealth Secretariat, an intergovern- mental agency of the British Commonwealth. CYCI completed a three-year pilot cycle at Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India in 1999, conducted in collaboration with the International Centre for Entrepreneurship and Career Development (ICECD).The program became self-sustaining after three years, with operational self-sufficiency of 98 percent.After the three-year pilot program, 82 percent of participants were successfully operating microenterprises on a self-sustainable basis. Female partici- pation exceeded 75 percent.More than 2,500 young people in India were trained and provided with small loans. Similar schemes have been implemented in other Commonwealth member states in Africa, South Asia, and the Caribbean. In Africa the Secretariat has been consulting with the governments of Cameroon, Mozambique, Seychelles, and Sierra Leone to implement CYCI. Short-term training in enterprise development was provided in Ghana in January 2005 as the first phase of a national CYCI project there. Successful Comprehensive Programs:The Jóvenes Programs The Jóvenes programs are public initiatives developed in Latin America and the Caribbean beginning in the early 1990s.5 With the emphasis on demand, the model targets disadvantaged workers 16­29 with vocational training and numerous support services. The model was replicated in several countries across the region--first in Chile and subsequently in Républica Bolivariana deVenezuela, Argentina,Paraguay,Peru,Colombia,Panama,and the Dominican Republic.Few programs are currently operating; most have been adopted by national public training institutions or replaced by smaller interventions that inherited features from this model. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION. The main features of the program include the following: · Recruitment: Advertising campaigns in selected municipalities promoted the programs.Screening of potential participants took place in local offices,where, upon selection, participants were introduced to the program and its features. · Training:Beneficiaries received technical skills training in an occupation (agri- culture, industry, services, and construction). Courses aimed to develop work International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 151 habits and strengthen basic skills (reading,writing,and math;problem solving; logical reasoning; teamwork; interaction with peers and superiors; and under- standing of instructions).The training lasted 150­250 hours on average. Some programs also offered job search assistance for 6­12 weeks. · Internship: Participants acquired experience in a real work environment. Paid internships were uncommon. Most trainees did not receive wages from the sponsoring firms. Internships lasted two to three months on average. Through a bidding process, the programs selected training providers based on experience and the quality of their proposals. Firms for the internships were cho- sen based on their experience; features (infrastructure, supplies, and so forth); and relevance of their activity to the training content. PROGRAM COSTS AND BENEFITS. Estimates of the unit cost for the Jóvenes pro- grams range from $600 to $2,000 per participant.Across programs there is evidence of increased employment probability and earnings of participants upon graduation compared with the control group. In Argentina, for instance, there was a 10 per- cent increase in the employment probability of adult women;in Chile the program increased the probability of employment by 21 percentage points,with particularly strong results for women and participants under 21. Earnings increased about 10 percentage points in Argentina and the Dominican Republic, with particularly favorable outcomes for young men, and about 26 percent in Chile, where the results were strongest among the youngest participants. The Jóvenes programs are relatively cost-effective. Early evidence from Peru indicates that the positive earnings effect lasts at least seven years.A recent longi- tudinal version of propensity score matching shows a positive internal rate of return that is consistently above 4 percent. In the Dominican Republic investment on training was recuperated after two years. Entra 21 Entra 21 was developed by the International Youth Foundation to prepare 16- to 29-year-olds in LatinAmerica for today's information-based economy.6The program has been widely implemented by local and central governments,NGOs,and local businesses to improve the employability of disadvantaged young people.The pro- gram began in 2002 with the goal of providing skills training in information and communication technology to 12,000 young workers over a three-year period and placing at least 40 percent of them in jobs. Entra 21 programs are cofinanced by the Multilateral Investment Fund of the Inter- American Development Bank. Other important partners are Microsoft, the Lucent Technologies Foundation, Merrill Lynch, and USAID. Grants have been awarded in 18 countries (Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay,Peru,Uruguay,and Républica Bolivariana deVenezuela). 152 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone PROGRAM DESCRIPTION. Entra 21 supports young people through well-designed and coordinated lectures and internships. It offers life-skills training and continu- ous tutoring, central features of the intervention and key determinants of its suc- cess.There is also a financial scheme to provide incentives for people to register in the program. Programs last two years on average and target mainly un- or under- employed disadvantaged young people who have completed high school (or are in the process of doing so). Men and women are equally represented. Indigenous young people are targeted in Bolivia and Guatemala. PROGRAM BENEFITS. Evaluations in Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Panama, Paraguay, and Peru show positive gross impacts on the employability of participants. Estimated job placement rates range from 41 percent in Paraguay to 68 percent in Peru,with high satisfaction levels of both employers and beneficiaries. Placement rates have been lower for women, espe- cially in Panama, where 64 percent of male participants but just 34 percent of female participants obtained jobs. In contrast, in São Paulo, Brazil, both genders obtained the same placement rate.Average monthly wages were at least as high as the minimum wage in Bolivia, Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Panama, Paraguay, and Peru. Most participants attained jobs in the formal sector that offered at least one or more benefits,such as paid vacations,a one-month bonus, and health insurance. The Jua Kali Voucher Program in Kenya One of the best known voucher training programs is Kenya's Jua Kali program, established in 1997 as a pilot program, under the auspices of the Micro and Small Enterprise Training and Technology Project.7 Vouchers are issued to unemployed young people, who select their own training provider based on their needs and objectives. Vouchers for training have been used for some time in the United Kingdom and more recently in Germany and other countries. Such programs intend to empower recipients with the capacity to buy training on the open market,thereby promoting competition between private and public suppliers.The approach should improve the quality of training and reduce costs while ensuring a better match between the participant and the training course. Under the Jua Kali pilot program,anyone eligible for training is given a voucher that can be used at the chosen training provider. Participants pay only 10 percent of the cost of the voucher,with the government subsidizing the remaining 90 per- cent. Master craftspeople were the major providers of training, responding to demand from clients. Under the program,37,606 vouchers were issued to entrepreneurs and employ- ees in enterprises with 50 workers or fewer over the 1997­2001 period.Although the scheme did not focus exclusively on young people, the majority of those trained were young and disadvantaged. International Experience withYouth Programs and Lessons for Sierra Leone 153 There is evidence that the scheme has had a positive impact on participants and that it has boosted employment,assets,and business for enterprises that participated (in comparison with the control group).These findings relate to a small popula- tion served by the pilot program; there is no evidence of outcomes/impact in a large (national) sample.The scheme was complex and costly to establish,and it has proven to be difficult to phase out the subsidization of the vouchers. The Jua Kali experience suggests that there is scope for the use of vouchers in a system targeted at the most vulnerable.It also yields several lessons about the use of vouchers. First, voucher schemes should be administered through the private sector rather than through a government ministry (as in Kenya). Second, the scheme should include provision for upgrading of training providers, especially those from small enterprises.Third, it should promote the willingness of clients to pay for training. Fourth, an exit strategy is needed for phasing out subsidies. Programs in Sierra Leone Sierra Leone has a variety of employment programs for young people.The pro- grams described in table C.1 provides examples of the main types of programs. 154 Table C.1 Selected Programs forYoung People in Sierra Leone Implementation Program Objective Activities Coverage partners/duration Program category Basic Education Improve lives of · Rapid Primary Education (RPE), Some 405 participants at GTZ, Ministry of Comprehensive, forYouth in marginalized which includes writing, math, and the three training centers Youth and including Postconflict children and young science; basic health education; and in Kailahun, Koidu, and Sports/2004­06 second-chance Situations people through elementary political education to Waterloo; another 1,700 education education promote peaceful coexistence and participants assisted by democratic conduct 180 peer educators · Training with local tradespeople, such as car mechanics, electricians, and carpenters. · Counseling for participants traumatized by war Youth Component of · Nonformal education focused on As of end-March 2004, USAID, Office of Comprehensive Reintegration Disarmament, reintegration 80,540 war-affected young Transition Training and Demobilization and · Development of livelihood skills people, including excom- Initiatives,World Education for Reintegration through environmental, health, and batants, had participated at Vision Peace (YRTEP) program,which nation building related activities 3,510 sites throughout the Programa tracked and · Basic literacy and numeracy skills, as country monitored all appropriate registered · Training of learning facilitators excombatants and provided training to all willing to participate Youth Reduce high rate of · Market research, in collaboration Up to four rural centers in GTZ; Ministry of Improving chances Employment unemployment with Ministry of Labor, to Kailahun, Pujehun, and Labor, Social for young entre- Promotion among people determine actual and potential theWestern Area Security and preneurs, includ- 15­35 absorption capacity of employment Industrial ing through skill market Relations; development · Micro level: support to community- Ministry of training based NGOs in establishing Education, sustainable employment Science and opportunities Technology/ · Mezzo level:assistance to small and 2006­09 medium-size enterprises though financial support;formation of viable trade associations;and upgrading of their organizational,technical,and managerial competences · Macro level: support to Ministry of Education, Science andTechnology; Ministry of Labor, Social Security and Industrial Relations; selected district authorities; entrepreneur and craft associations; and training establishments in improving employability of marginalized young people. 155 (continued) 156 Table C.1 (Continued) Implementation Program Objective Activities Coverage partners/duration Program category · Development of framework for business development services for small and medium-size businesses and business startups aimed at socioeconomic reintegration of young men and women · Dialogue between state and private sector, which is to play key role, promoted by organizing roundtables and working groups, using existing coordination groups · Technical skills training to upgrade skills in various areas,including automobile mechanics,pump maintenance,welding,and electrical works Promotion Develop the potential · Apprenticeship training Rural and semi-urban areas GTZ; Ministry of Skills training of the of marginalized · Community-based nonformal Education, Development people 15­35 in activities Science and Potential of rural and semiurban · Capacity building of the Ministry Technology Youth areas through of Education (including assistance nonformal by international expertise and education and exchange) social counseling · Social counseling SkillsTraining Promote reintegration · Public work schemes 105 projects supported; USAID,World Opening pathways and of excombatants · Microgrants, including business 11,362 beneficiaries in six Vision; 2002­04 to jobs, Employment and others affected management training districts (Bo, Bonthe, improving Promotion by war in their · Skills training, including in Pujehun, Kenema, chances for Program communities by masonry/brick laying, carpentry, Kailahun, and Kono) young (STEP) stimulating local and tailoring entrepreneurs (follow-up to economic activities YRTEP) and increasing opportunities for vocational skill acquisition SkillsTraining Increase social · Strengthening of life skills and Koindadugu USAID, Christian Improving chances and reintegration of positive social role of 480 Children's Fund for young Employment excombatants and excombatants and community entrepreneurs, Generation II the community members including skill (STEG II) through · Opportunity for 949 excombatants development community-based and communities to benefit from skills development, microcredit loans through solidarity employment, group lending cooperation, and · Creation of temporary employment reconciliation for excombatants and community members, and · Provision of seeds or small ruminant animals (goats and sheep) to 3,725 farm families for agricultural 157 rehabilitation (continued) 158 Table C.1 (Continued) Implementation Program Objective Activities Coverage partners/duration Program category Linkages for Increase production · Micro level: support for farm Kailahun, Koinadugu, and USAID, CARE Livelihood and build economies innovation; promotion of micro- Kono International, Security and at the community enterprise (especially agroprocessing, Catholic Relief Economic level by promoting storage, and input supply) through Services,World Development microenterprise savings, credit provision, start-up Vision, Project development and grants, business management training, Africare/Sierra (LINKS) enhancing market- and market-led appropriate Leone, Search for led agricultural technology; and piloting of Common innovation;integrate agricultural credit and start-up grants Ground/ communities into · Mezzo level: elimination of obstacles 2005­07 regional and and filling of niches to improve flow national markets of inputs to and outputs from through increased communities; support of microfinance flow of inputs to institutions; and support of small-scale and outputs from transport solutions the communities; · Macro level: dialogue at the national and integrate level to provide information to marginalized young influence policy on economic people into dynamic information services, agricultural rural economies marketing, and agricultural input supply Disadvantaged Create enabling · Placement of street children in More than 700 participants in GOAL Ireland, Comprehensive Children and environment temporary shelter, where they Freetown, Kenema, and UNICEF program Youth leading to improved receive range of services (counseling, Tongo Field; program tar- including Program livelihoods for health, education) and are reunified gets orphans; street chil- second-chance (DCYP) disadvantaged chil- with their families if possible dren; commercial sex education and dren and young · Provision of formal education to workers, including children; skill development people. Program children under 13 and extremely poor young aims to remove · Provision of 18­36 months of people children from nonformal education and skills vulnerable training to older children; upon situations, especially graduation students receive start-up the streets, and to kits assist them in becoming self-reliant. Sierra Leone Reintegrate young · Eight-week training program 122 participants Action Aid; Improving chances Youth in Crisis people into their followed by construction and 1998­2002 for young Projectb communities marketing of housing units (program entrepreneurs provided food for training) · Training in fish production, processing,and preservation followed by training in marketing skills, business savings, credit, and related issues intended to enhance the prospects of sustainable livelihood 159 (continued) Table C.1 (Continued) 160 Implementation Program Objective Activities Coverage partners/duration Program category Community Respond to · School rehabilitation with Moyamaba andTonkolili CARE, Skills training and Youth community- involvement of young people Netherlands' strengthening Recovery identified needs of · Skills training, and formation of Ministry of youth citizenship Project particular relevance groups of young people in Foreign Affairs (CYRP)c to young people cooperation with local leadership to empower marginalized individuals to contribute to the reformation of village-level institutions and decision-making processes Lower Bambara Promote youth · Support of cooperative that turned 28 participants inTongo Started through Skills training Youth agricultural mined-out area into a rice field Fields USAID Agricultural activities through training and provision of Education for Association seeds and basic tools Peace Program, currently supported by GTZ Youth in Develop youth centers · Creation of centers to provide space More than 3,000 Conciliation Youth centers Progressd to respond to needs for young people to gather beneficiaries in Bo and Resources identified by young · Provision of recreational activities Kenema people through sports and development of libraries · Development of microprojects and awareness raising on peace building, conflict analysis, rights-based issues, and civic education Agriculture for Support youth with · Support for farming activities, 140 participants, most of Youth Skills training Sustainable no or only basic including swampland and upland them internally displaced Empowerment Developmente education to acquire cultivation; vegetable production persons from camp at for Development vocational and (cassava, potatoes, and groundnuts); Waterloo; unemployed Ministries, practical skills and and livestock farming young people from Ministry of engage in affiliate groups, such as Youth and productive the Firestone Community Sports income-generating Development and activities to make Cultural Organization, them self-reliant Barham RoadYouth, and and responsible theWaterlooYouth Organization; and marginalized street people Sierra Leone Help young people Phase 1 (1997­2002): Projects in National European Union, Opening pathways Rehabilitation and communities agricultural sector and related income International to jobs, skills and resettle in their generation: Rescue training Resettlement areas of origin by · support for agricultural activities Committee Programme providing through seed distribution; provision agricultural of agricultural tools; rehabilitation assistance and of tree crop plantations; technical employment in assistance for cultivating vegetables; basic social services provision of agricultural stores, drying floors, and crop-processing (continued) 161 162 Table C.1 (Continued) Implementation Program Objective Activities Coverage partners/duration Program category equipment; and support for small- scale fishing and animal husbandry · skills training, school construction, renovation of vocational training centers, and provision of school furniture · rehabilitation of hospitals and peripheral health care units and provision of refresher training for medical staff · provision of short-term employment through public works programs Phase 2 (2002­05):Assistance to war- affected populations and communities to resettle in their areas of origin: · agricultural assistance programs · support for reintegrating excombatants into society through paid employment concentrating on rehabilitation of infrastructure · improved provision of basic social services in health,sanitation,and education AddressingYouth Strengthen existing · Consultations and development of n.a. Youth Alliance for Skills training Poverty in Post efforts/structures in project activities with all key Peace and War Sierra enterprise stakeholders Development, Leone development · Institutional strengthening of small Village Aid, organizations for young people European · Support of enterprise development Union, Sierra activities in agriculture, such as mech- Leone youth anized farming and animal husbandry organizations Youth Support increased · Support to specialized units within National, 48 areas Ministry of Youth Improving chances Engagement and broader Ministry of Youth and Sports for and Sports, for young and Job participation of policy formulation, research, project United Nations entrepreneurs, Creation youth in decision planning, supervision, monitoring, Development strengthening Program making, job and gender Programme youth citizenship creation, and · Identification of institutions/ training, and organizations and their training/ promote responsible support capacity citizenry. Program · Identification of youth groups in aims to tackle high-vulnerability/high-return areas problem of · Development of support mechanism alienation by for young people with vocational promoting culture training or apprenticeship experience of excellence that · Development of income-generating empowers young activities in a participatory way people to be · Establishment of district youth productive committees 163 (continued) 164 Table C.1 (Continued) Implementation Program Objective Activities Coverage partners/duration Program category · Work with ministries of youth, agriculture, forestry and food security, and other relevant ministries to streamline and align interventions with national policies · Support for systems for improving training capacity to meet defined needs · Support for and funding of viable income-generating ideas and projects · Support for marketing of products and coordination efforts FreetownWaste Promote sustainable · Creation of a waste management Freetown GTZ, Freetown Opening pathways Management livelihood authority based on a public-private City Council to jobs System mechanisms for enterprise young people by · Support for development of combining intensive enterprises owned by young people, infrastructure including through training and access projects and to financing promotion of small · Support for implementation of waste and medium-size management projects by small and enterprises microenterprises Distance Expand knowledge · Distance learning course that n.a. National Improving chances Learning in of microfinance by presents comprehensive Commission for of entrepreneurs Microfinance professionals and introduction to sustainable Social Action, students microfinance (areas covered include Njala University economics, finance, business, and international development and banking) Source: Authors' compilation. Note: n.a. = not available. a. For more information, see http://reliefweb.int/library/documents/2002/care-sle-31aug.pdf. b. For more information, see http://yesweb.org/gkr/project_factsheet.html?pid=234. c. For more information, see http://www.care.org/careswork/projects/SLE030.asp?. d. For more information, see http://c-r.org/resources/occasional-papers/sierra-leone-youth-crisis.php. e. For more information, see http://orgs.tigweb.org/3700. 165 166 Youth Employment in Sierra Leone Notes 1. Descriptions of the international programs are based on Puerto (2007). 2. This section is based on Jaramillo (2006) and Jaramillo and Parodi (2003). 3. 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Index Boxes, figures, notes, and tables are denoted by apprenticeships "b,""f,""n," and "t" following the page numbers. international programs, 80, 82, 85t, 88­89, 90b, 110 Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab, recommendations for, 8, 10, 111, 115 25n3 as unpaid labor, 38 accounting training, 73, 76, 110, 113, 114 for unskilled workers, 73 adolescents, defined, 13. See also young associational activity, 23 people Australia, national training authority in, Agence d'Exécution desTravaux 103n13 d'Internet Public contre le Sous-Emploi (AGETIP) programs, Bah, Khadija, 16 82, 86, 86b, 101, 114 banking system, 62 agrarian involution, 16 Bosnia and Herzegovina agriculture economic development in, 102n6 access to financing, 116 Youth Promotion Project in, 148 constraints on operations, 59t, 60­61, Brazil 69t, 70t exchange programs in, 118 education levels and, 63 national training authority in, 103n13 employment in, 6, 7, 43­44, bribes, 68 53, 108, 109 budgets farm owners profile, 62­64 for education, 93­94 labor force profile of, 64­66 performance-based, 97 labor shortages and, 60, 69t, 76, 106 forTVET, 94, 96 recommendations for, 113­14 Burkina Faso seasonal labor and, 67 school participation rates in, 18 training for, 8, 70­71, 72t, 73, 118 time use patterns in, 52t AIDS. See HIV/AIDS Burundi alcoholism, 66 economic development in, 102n6 alliances, 15 time use patterns in, 52t Annan, Kofi, 22­23 unemployment in, 50 173 174 Index business CYCI (CommonwealthYouth Credit cooperatives, 17 Initiative, India), 149­50 counseling, 88b, 112­13 development training, 73 daily deposit collection systems, 62 environment, 58­62 DDR. See Disarmament, Demobilization, labor force profile of, 64­66, 65t and Reintegration program owners' profile, 62­64, 63t Department for International Development (DfID, UK), 3 Cameroon, time use patterns in, 52t Disadvantaged Children andYouth CECs (community education centers), 93 Program (DCPY), 99, 100, 159t Central African Republic, economic Disarmament, Demobilization, and development in, 102n6 Reintegration (DDR) program, 18, 99 certification for entrepreneurs, 87b discouraged workers, 6, 31, 35, 53, 54n3, child mortality, 4, 5t, 19 108 Chile, exchange programs in, 118 discrimination, 66, 67, 109 Christian Children's Fund, 100 disorder and business environment, 59 citizenship, 22­23 DistrictYouth Committees, 23 collective savings programs, 61, 62 domestic competition, 59 Colombia, exchange programs in, 118 dropout rates, 18, 28­30, 100 commercial sex workers, 20 drug prevention, 98 CommonwealthYouth Credit Initiative (CYCI, India), 149­50 economic development, 4­5 communication skills training, 113 education. See also training community education centers (CECs), 93 of business owners, 62­63 community labor, 16 as constraint on business, 59t, 60 community participation, 23 curriculum reform, 96 Complementary Rapid Education for employment in, 67 Primary Schools (CREPS), 98­99 formal sector employment and, 42­43 comprehensive interventions, 85t, government spending on, 93­94 91, 110 labor market demand for, 69­74, 79 conditional cash transfer programs, 113, leaving school, 28­30 114, 115, 117 participation rates, 18, 19f, 28­30, 100 conflict settings postconflict life transitions and, 12b HIV/AIDS infection rates and, 20 recommendations for, 117­18 life transitions and, 11 regional comparisons, 50, 52t young people in, 12b remedial, 80 corruption, 5, 68, 115 self-employment and, 76 Côte d'Ivoire system structure, 93­95, 94f economic development in, 102n6 TVET and, 92­93 national training authority in, 103n13 unemployment and, 34, 54n6 time use patterns in, 52t unpaid labor and, 39 Country Assistance Strategy (World Bank),1 wages and, 48, 50f, 51f credit. See financing, access to young people and, 18­19 CREPS (Complementary Rapid Education Act of 2004, 18 Education for Primary Schools), education equivalency programs, 8, 89­90, 98­99 98­99, 110, 115­16 crime and business environment, 59 Education in Sierra Leone study (World curriculum reform, 96 Bank), 117 Index 175 elders formal sector employment, 6, 41­43, 42f, relations between young people and, 17 53, 108 social control by, 13 hiring by, 68 electrical generators, 60 migrants and, 37 electricity, access to, 59 recommendations for, 113 as constraint on business, 59t, 60 in urban areas, 58, 58t economic growth and, 106 Free Primary Education Policy of 2001, 18 Enhancing Interaction and Interface FreetownWaste Management System, 100, between Civil Society and the State 164t to Improve Poor People's Lives fuel costs, 60 (ENCISS), 4 full-time labor, 46, 67, 109 Entra 21 Program, 88, 151­52 full-time students, defined, 27 entrepreneurship. See also self-employment financing for, 62t, 79 The Gambia job creation through, 101 time use patterns in, 52t recommendations for, 116­17 unemployment in, 50 training for, 87­88b, 98, 110 gender differences young entrepreneurs, 86­87 in access to land, 17 equipment, farming, 59t, 60, 61, 61t, 106 in agricultural employment, 65 Ethiopia in employer perceptions of young inactive in labor market status in, 50 people, 66­67 time use patterns in, 52t in formal sector employment, 41, 42­43 exchange programs, 118 in HIV/AIDS infection rates, 20 extension workers, 73 in labor market, 108­9 in marriage age, 21­22, 21f family expectations and self-employment, in political and community 40 participation, 23 family formation, 20­22 in rural vs. urban populations, 13, family lineage, 14 14f, 106 farms. See agriculture in self-employment, 40 FarmYouth Development Program in transition to parenthood, 20­21, (Philippines), 148­49 20f, 106 fertilizers, 61 in unemployment, 33f, 34, 53 FIAS (Foreign Investment Advisory generators, electrical, 60 Service), 58 German Agency forTechnical financial services sector, 61­62 Cooperation (GTZ), 3, 101 financing, access to Ghana, apprenticeships in, 89 agriculture sector and, 60, 61 girls. See women and girls as constraint on business, 59­60, 59t, Great Britain and social context, 15b 61t, 106 Guinea, economic development in, 102n6 for entrepreneurs, 59, 62t, 79 recommendations for, 116 health care fisheries employment, 45, 109 education and, 80 food-processing technology training, 73, employment in, 67 76, 110, 114 public health infrastructure and, 20 Foreign Investment Advisory Service quality of, 4 (FIAS), 58 young people and, 19­20 formal credit. See financing, access to high-skilled labor development, 118 176 Index hiring methods, 67­68, 68t short-term, higher risk, 116­17 HIV/AIDS short-term, low risk, 112­16 awareness campaigns, 98 prevalence of, 4, 19­20 James,Vincent, 16 home duties. See nonmarket activities job counseling and search assistance, 80, 82 Human Development Index (UNDP), 4 jobless status human resource management training, 113 defined, 30, 54n4 rate of, 31, 31f, 32t implementation capacity, 9, 111 job security policies, 80 inactive in labor market, 30­36 Jordan, national training authority in, defined, 27, 30 103n13 regional comparisons, 50, 52t Jóvenes programs (Latin America), 91, in urban areas, 107 147­48, 150­51 income-generating activities for Jua KaliVoucher Program (Kenya), 89, 90b, entrepreneurs, 87b 152­53 income protection for job losses, 80 India, microfinance in, 149­50 Kenya infant mortality, 4, 5t, 19 apprenticeships in, 90b Informality Survey (FIAS), 58 education in, 50 informal loans, 61­62 Project Baobab, 149 informal sector school participation rates in, 18 skills training in, 66­67 skills training vouchers in, 89, 90b, in urban areas, 58, 58t 152­53 information technology training, 73, 76, time use patterns in, 52t 110, 113 Kosovo infrastructure. See also public works economic development in, 102n6 programs postconflict life transitions and, 12b agriculture and, 60 as constraint on business, 59, 59t labor centers, 98, 111 economic growth and, 106 labor costs, 61, 76, 106 employment in, 46 labor force profile, 64­66, 65t in-service training, 96 labor market Institutional Reform and Capacity business environment and, 58­62 Building Project, 25n3 business owners profile, 62­64 intergenerational tensions, 16­17, 106 demand, 57­77, 135­46 international experience with youth distribution of, 43­46, 43f, 44f programs, 79­103, 83­85t employer perceptions of young workers, forces shaping youth labor demand, 66­67 79­81 employer survey, 58 lessons from, 110­11 employment status, 36­49 program summaries, 147­53 farm owners' profile, 62­64 Youth Employment Inventory lessons, formal sector employment, 41­43 81­91 full-time labor, 67 International Labor Organization, 35, 107 hiring methods, 67­68 interventions labor force profile, 64­66 comprehensive, 85t, 91, 110 linkages for entrepreneurs, 87b list of, 154­65t low skill levels and, 69­74 long-term, 117­18 migrants and, 37b Index 177 participation rates, 36, 37f, 50 literacy part-time labor, 46, 46f, 67 rate, 4, 5t quality of work, 47 training, 73, 89, 110, 113 regulatory environment, 60, 80 livestock sector, 45, 109 rural area shortages, 18, 60, 67­68, 69t, long-term interventions, 117­18 76, 114 low-income countries under stress seasonal labor, 67 (LICUS), 82, 102n6 self-employment, 39­40 low skill levels, 69­74. See also training specialized labor development, 118 training and, 69­74 Madagascar, time use patterns in, 52t transition to parenthood and, 21 Malawi underemployment, 46­47 education in, 50 unpaid labor, 38­39 time use patterns in, 52t wage employment, 40­41, 47­49 unemployment in, 50 land Malaysia, national training authority in, access to, 108 103n13 agriculture sector and, 60 management and marketing training, 71, male control of, 17 73, 76 recommendations for, 119 recommendations for, 110, 113, 114 social organization and, 16 marriage, 21f, 29, 106 large businesses maternal mortality, 4, 5t, 19 cost of financing as constraint on, 59t, 60 Mauritius, national training authority in, education levels and, 60, 63 103n13 hiring by, 67­68 medium-size businesses labor shortages and, 60 hiring by, 67 training needs of, 8, 71t, 72t, 73, 110 public works projects and, 115 in urban areas, 58, 58t training needs of, 71­73, 71t, 72t water access as constraint on, 59, 59t in urban areas, 58, 58t large farms water access as constraint on, 59, 59t business environment for, 58, 58t medium-size farms equipment access for, 61 business environment for, 58, 58t labor shortages and, 68­69 equipment access for, 61 training needs of, 71t, 72t, 73 labor shortages and, 68­69 Latin America training of employees in, 70, 71t, 72t, 73 comprehensive interventions in, 91 mentoring programs, 117 Jóvenes programs in, 91, 147­48, methodology, 3­4 150­51 microfinance Liberia, postconflict life transitions in, 12b access to, 62, 108 life expectancy, 4, 5t international programs, 149­50 life skills training, 98 as intervention, 98 life transitions, 11, 12b. See also school to recommendations for, 116, 117 work transition migrants age of, 2, 6, 22f, 27, 106 employment rates of, 36 to parenthood, 20­21, 20f, 106 labor market and, 37b, 69 lineage, family, 14 in retail industry, 45 Linkages for Livelihood Security and young people as, 13 Economic Development Project minimum wages, 48­49, 80 (LINKS), 103n14, 158t mining industry, 45, 109, 118 178 Index Ministry of Education, Science and part-time labor, 46, 46f, 67 Technology, 96 pathways to employment, 82­86 Ministry of Education,Youth and Sports, patrilineage, 14­15, 16 23, 97, 121 PCY (Program for the Promotion of Ministry of Youth and Sports, 23, 97 Children andYouth, Uganda), 92b Mozambique Peace-Building Commission for Sierra inactive in labor market status in, 50 Leone, 4 national training authority in, 103n13 performance-based budgeting, 97, 118 time use patterns in, 52t Philippines multiservice programs, 91, 98 FarmYouth Development Program, 148­49 National Action Plan forYouth, 10, 97, 111 national training authority in, 103n13 National Commission forTechnical, physically challenged young people, 66 Vocational and other Academic political awareness, 23 Awards, 93 population and education, 79­80 National Primary School Examination postconflict settings (NPSE), 98 education in, 18 national qualification frameworks, 96 HIV/AIDS infection rates and, 20 national training authorities, 103n13 life transitions and, 11 NationalYouth Advisory Council, 23 training and, 98 NationalYouth Commission, 23, 98, young people in, 12b, 82 111, 119 poverty NationalYouth Policy, 23 rates of, 4 Nepal, life transitions in, 12b reduction programs, 44, 80, 113­14 NGOs. See nongovernmental Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP, organizations Sierra Leone), 1, 97, 105 Nigeria, economic development in, primary education, 95, 117. See also 102n6 education nonformal training and education, 8, 80, private sector development, 106, 112­13, 89­90, 90b, 98 121 nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) production technology training, 73, 76, employment services by, 121 110, 113 implementation capacity of, 111 professionals partnerships with, 98 defined, 76n4 public works projects by, 114 recommendations for, 113 recommendations for, 119 Program for the Promotion of Children training provided by, 73, 101 andYouth (PCY, Uganda), 92b nonmarket activities, 30, 32, 55n7 Project Baobab (Kenya), 149 prostitutes, 20 OECD countries Protectorate Native Law Ordinance of apprenticeships in, 80 1905, 15b training programs in, 102n9 Protectorate Ordinance of 1896, 15b unemployment in, 35 PRSP. See Poverty Reduction Strategy youth employment programs and Paper interventions in, 81­82 public health infrastructure, 20 on-the-job training, 8, 73, 88­89, 113 Public Health Ordinance, 24n2 opportunity cost of education, 29­30 public works programs osusus, 61, 62 employment in, 7, 8, 109 Index 179 international programs, 80, 82­83, 83t, leaving school, 28­30 86, 86b, 110 migrants and, 37b work experience gained through, statistics on, 123­33 114­15 time use and, 28­49 purchasing power, 10, 59 unemployment and, 30­36 working, 36­49 quality assurance framework, 115, 118 seasonal labor, 32, 54n3, 67, 69t quality of work, 47 secondary schools, 30, 117 second-chance education programs, 8, regulatory environment, 60, 80 89­90, 98­99, 110, 115­16 remedial education, 80 self-employment. See also entrepreneurship rent costs, 60 education levels and, 63, 76 reproductive health, 19­20 employment in, 7, 108 resource allocation, 97, 120 policy support for, 80 retail industry, 6, 45, 108, 109 quality of work and, 47 reverse migration programs, 111 rates of, 39­40, 39f Richards, Paul, 16, 17 recommendations for, 116­17 roads and road maintenance, 60, 114. transition from unpaid labor to, 51 See also infrastructure unemployment and, 64 rotating savings associations, 61, 62 Senegal, job creation in, 86, 86b ruling families, 15b service industry, 6, 45, 67, 108 rural areas sexual harassment, 65 citizenship in, 23 sexual health, 19­20 education access in, 19 sexually transmitted diseases, 4, 19. See also education levels and, 29­30 HIV/AIDS employment rates in, 36­38 short-term employment. See temporary farm ownership in, 64 jobs inactivity in, 31­32 short-term interventions, 112­17 joblessness in, 33 Sierra Leone Employers Survey (SLES), labor market participation in, 37f 3, 58 labor shortages in, 67­69, 114 Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey nonmarket activities in, 32 (SLIHS), 3, 18, 94 population by age group, 14f Singapore, national training authority in, self-employment in, 40 103n13 social control by elders in, 13 skills profiles, improvement of, 88­91, time use in, 29f 115­16. See also training unemployment in, 6, 33f, 53 SkillsTraining and Employment unpaid labor in, 35, 38f Generation project, 100 wage employment and, 40, 47, 49f small businesses work transitions in, 52 hiring by, 67 young people in, 13 public works projects and, 115 Rwanda, postconflict life transitions in, 12b training needs of, 71t, 72t, 73 in urban areas, 58, 58t safety training, 73, 76, 110 water access as constraint on, 59, 59t schools. See education small farms school to work transition, 27­55 business environment for, 58, 58t benchmarking to region, 50 labor shortages and, 68­69 inactivity and, 30­36 training of employees in, 70, 71t, 72t, 73 180 Index social activism, 17, 23, 106 training social constructs, 13­18, 15b future entrepreneurs, 87­88b, 110 somewhat employed status, 30, 32 international programs, 82, 84t, 88, 89 South Africa labor market demand for, 69­74 national training authority in, 103n13 nonformal, 80 specialized training in, 118 recommendations for, 112­13, 114 specialized labor development, 118 transition age, 2, 6, 22f, 27, 106 specialized technology center, 118 transportation issues, 100, 103n14, 114 Statistics Sierra Leone, 3, 58 tribal obligations and self-employment, 40 strategic alliances, 15 TVET. See technical and vocational Strengthening InformalTraining and education and training Enterprise (SITE, Kenya), 90b student and worker status, 27, 30 Uganda Sub-Saharan Africa HIV/AIDS infection rates in, 20 AGETIP programs in, 82, 86 postconflict life transitions in, 12b comprehensive interventions in, 91 Program for the Promotion of Children interventions for, 81 andYouth, 92b school participation rates in, 18 time use patterns in, 52t student and worker combination in, 30 unemployment in, 50 teenage pregnancy in, 20 underemployment, 35, 46­47, 47t, 53, 108 time use patterns in, 52t unemployment, 30­36 training programs in, 89 defined, 27, 31, 54n4 underemployment in, 35 education and, 54n6 unemployment in, 34 labor market distortions and, 55n11 length of, 34, 35f Tanzania rates, 33f migrants in, 13 regional comparisons, 50, 52t national training authority in, 103n13 unpaid labor and, 55n12 targeting of programs, 121 in urban areas, 6, 107 technical and vocational education and United Nations training (TVET) Capital Development Fund (UNCDF), curriculum reform, 96 62 effectiveness of, 8 Development Fund forWomen enrollments at, 19, 91 (UNIFEM), 100 government spending on, 94, 96 Development Programme (UNDP), international programs, 110 4, 100 recommendations for, 111, 117­18 Food and Agricultural Organization role of, 92­97 (FAO), 100 technical vocational centers and institutes, Industrial Development Organization 93 (UNIDO), 100 teenage pregnancy rate, 19, 20­21 Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL), 3 temporary jobs, 9, 86b, 98, 111, 114 World Program of Action forYouth, 11 theft, 59 United States time use patterns comprehensive interventions in, 91 regional comparisons, 50, 52t training programs in, 88 school to work transition and, 28­49, unpaid labor, 6, 38­39, 53 28f, 29f in agriculture sector, 61, 107, 108 tourism industry, 45, 109, 118 categories of, 24n2 Index 181 quality of work and, 47 women and girls. See also gender differences in rural areas, 35, 38f agricultural employment and, 43­44, 63 transition to self-employment from, 51 education levels of, 18, 19, 29 unemployment and, 55n12 formal sector employment and, 42­43 unskilled workers home duties and, 55n7 apprenticeships for, 73 inactive in labor market status of, 33 defined, 77n4 labor market participation of, 108­9 urban areas nonmarket activities and, 32 education levels and, 29 perceptions of, 36 employment rates in, 38 postconflict life transitions and, 12b enterprise owners in, 106 in retail industry, 45 formal sector employment in, 41 sexual harassment of, 65 inactive in labor market in, 107 transition to parenthood of, 20f, 106 joblessness in, 33 TVET enrollment by, 93 labor market participation in, 37f wage employment and, 40 migration to, 17 work transitions of, 52 population by age group, 14f workers, defined, 27 self-employment in, 40 work experience time use in, 29f gained through public work schemes, unemployment in, 6, 33f, 34, 53, 107 114­15 wage employment in, 40, 47, 49f, 51f labor market demand for, 69­74 young people in, 13 World Bank U.S.Agency for International on agriculture and agrobusiness sector, Development (USAID), 3 44 enterprise owners survey by, 58 veterinary skills training, 76, 110, 114 Youth Employment Inventory, 81­91 violence and inactivity, 30 on youth programming, 79 vocational trade centers, 93 World Development Report (2007), 4, 11 vocational training, 82. See also technical World Health Organization (WHO), 11 and vocational education and training (TVET) YEI. SeeYouth Employment Inventory Voices andViews:Youth and Employment in young adults, defined, 13 Sierra Leone (World Bank & Young Entrepreneurs' Qualification ENCISS), 4 Program (Peru), 147­48 voting rights and participation, 22, 25n4 young people, 11­25 vouchers for skills training, 89, 90b, 113, citizenship and, 22­23 114, 118 in conflict and postconflict settings, 12b defined, 11­13, 105­6, 119­20 wage employment, 40­41, 41f education and, 18­19 wages, 47­49, 48­49f, 51f employer perceptions of, 66­67 wage subsidies, 80, 83t family formation and, 20­22 walk-ins, hiring of, 67­68, 68t health of, 19­20 "war boys," 15b labor markets and, 79­81, 106­10 waste management services, 114 marginalization of, 16, 22 water, access to, 59 profile of, 105­6 West Bank and Gaza, economic develop- social constructs for, 13­18, 15b ment in, 102n6 youth, defined, 13 Whiteside, Katherine, 23 "youth emancipation," 24 182 Index Youth Employment Inventory (YEI), Youth ReintegrationTraining and 81­91 Education for Peace (YRTEP) comprehensive interventions, 91 Program, 99, 100, 154t entrepreneurs, 86­87, 87­88b pathways to employment, 82­86 Zambia skills profile improvement, 88­91 national training authority in, 103n13 study methodology and, 3 time use patterns in, 52t youth labor teams, 114 Zimbabwe, economic development in, Youth Promotion Project (Bosnia and 102n6 Herzegovina), 148 Zimmer, David, 23 ECO-AUDIT Environmental Benefits Statement The World Bank is committed to preserving Saved: endangered forests and natural resources. The · 3 trees Office of the Publisher has chosen to print · 2 million BTUs of total Youth Employment in Sierra Leone on recy- energy cled paper with 30 percent postconsumer · 273 lbs. of CO2 equiva- fiber in accordance with the recommended lent of greenhouse standards for paper usage set by the Green gases Press Initiative, a nonprofit program support- · 1,134 gallons of ing publishers in using fiber that is not sourced waste water from endangered forests. For more informa- · 146 lbs. of solid waste tion, visit www.greenpressinitiative.org. C reating job opportunities for its large and growing number of young people is a key development challenge for the government of Sierra Leone. It is also crucial for maintaining peace and promoting pro-poor growth.Young people ages 15 to 35 years old are at a particular disadvantage relative to today's children or adults, as they grew up during a war, thereby potentially stunting their development and their transition into adulthood.This transition culminates with secure employment and the resources to provide for oneself and one's family. History suggests that marginalized young people can disrupt a peaceful society; youth who lacked education and access to job opportunities were at the core of the recent conflict, and it is important that this cycle not be repeated.The challenge is how to support their transition to adulthood and, in the process, avoid future conflict. Youth Employment in Sierra Leone examines the supply and demand sides of the labor market to better understand the situation of today's young people, relative to that of adults, and presents an evidence-based menu of potential programs and policies for Sierra Leone. In particular, the authors use a recent household survey and census data to examine patterns of formal and informal labor force activity and human capital accumulation.The authors commissioned a labor demand survey and report on its findings to determine the extent to which urban and rural employers hire young people and their decision-making process.The study reviews skill development programs to enhance youth employability, based on a review of international best practices and of the main programs in Sierra Leone.The authors conclude that youth are a dynamic part of the labor market and that the observed youth employment patterns are a result of the economy's structure rather than constraints facing youth. Short-term actions--to address the immediate needs of today's youth--and long-term strategies to improve the labor market's underlying limitations will be of interest to policy makers who are looking to turn the serious political, social, and economic challenges of sustainable youth employment into an opportunity. ISBN: 978-0-8213-7822-9 SKU: 17822