Achieving the Demographic Dividend in the Arab Republic of Egypt : Choice, Not Destiny

The Arab Republic of Egypt was well on the path to achieving its demographic dividend at the turn of this century but has gone off track due to a reversal in its earlier fertility decline. But what is the demographic dividend? It reflects the economic benefits when a country undergoes a rapid decline in mortality, then fertility, and the consequent demographic transition. Due to lower fertility and fewer children per household, a growing working-age population increases productivity and per capita income, leading to accumulated savings, investments, and economic growth, underscoring the strong link between demographics and economic growth. Fortunately, Egypt has the political will, resources, and capacity to achieve its demographic dividend in the next decade, as this report by a team of Egyptian and World Bank experts shows. It reviews the trends in determinants of the rising total fertility rate, the likely factors that contributed to Egypt’s fertility decline reversal, the government’s initial response, and the sectoral and social drivers that may have influenced this fertility decline reversal. It also assesses the economic impact of the demographic changes, including estimates of forgone savings due to the increased fertility and of potential future gains if the country were to regain and then accelerate its fertility decline. Drawing on global evidence, the report proposes six policy and strategic priorities, complemented by four policy imperatives. These priorities aim to increase the contraceptive prevalence rate (the most important of the six), reduce school dropouts, increase female labor force participation, delay early marriage, leverage social protection programs, and improve governance of the country's population program. The four imperatives aim to assure broad-based socioeconomic development and they include creating productive jobs; investing in and leveraging human capital; enhancing financial inclusion and entrepreneurship, especially for women; and sustaining macroeconomic stability. The president's "Decent Life Initiative" and the "National Project for the Development of the Egyptian Family" can be used as the platform to implement many of the proposed policies and strategies. In such a manner, Egypt will be back on track to achieve its demographic dividend.

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Main Authors: El-Saharty, Sameh (ed.), Nassar, Heba (ed.), Shawky, Sherine (ed.), Elshalakani, Amr (ed.), Hamza, Mariam M. (ed.), Zhang, Yi (ed.), Zeitoun, Nahla (ed.)
Format: Book biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Washington, DC : World Bank 2022
Subjects:DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND, POPULATION CHALLENGE, TRENDS AND CHANGES, NATIONAL POPULATION STRATEGY, GEOGRAPHIC DISAGGREGATION, GENDER AND SOCIAL NORMS, ECONOMIC IMPACT, FAMILY PLANNING, GIRLS' EDUCATION, AGE AT MARRIAGE, SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMS, GOVERNANCE REFORM,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37933
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spelling dig-okr-10986379332022-08-31T05:10:46Z Achieving the Demographic Dividend in the Arab Republic of Egypt : Choice, Not Destiny El-Saharty, Sameh (ed.) Nassar, Heba (ed.) Shawky, Sherine (ed.) Elshalakani, Amr (ed.) Hamza, Mariam M. (ed.) Zhang, Yi (ed.) Zeitoun, Nahla (ed.) DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND POPULATION CHALLENGE TRENDS AND CHANGES NATIONAL POPULATION STRATEGY GEOGRAPHIC DISAGGREGATION GENDER AND SOCIAL NORMS ECONOMIC IMPACT FAMILY PLANNING GIRLS' EDUCATION AGE AT MARRIAGE SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMS GOVERNANCE REFORM The Arab Republic of Egypt was well on the path to achieving its demographic dividend at the turn of this century but has gone off track due to a reversal in its earlier fertility decline. But what is the demographic dividend? It reflects the economic benefits when a country undergoes a rapid decline in mortality, then fertility, and the consequent demographic transition. Due to lower fertility and fewer children per household, a growing working-age population increases productivity and per capita income, leading to accumulated savings, investments, and economic growth, underscoring the strong link between demographics and economic growth. Fortunately, Egypt has the political will, resources, and capacity to achieve its demographic dividend in the next decade, as this report by a team of Egyptian and World Bank experts shows. It reviews the trends in determinants of the rising total fertility rate, the likely factors that contributed to Egypt’s fertility decline reversal, the government’s initial response, and the sectoral and social drivers that may have influenced this fertility decline reversal. It also assesses the economic impact of the demographic changes, including estimates of forgone savings due to the increased fertility and of potential future gains if the country were to regain and then accelerate its fertility decline. Drawing on global evidence, the report proposes six policy and strategic priorities, complemented by four policy imperatives. These priorities aim to increase the contraceptive prevalence rate (the most important of the six), reduce school dropouts, increase female labor force participation, delay early marriage, leverage social protection programs, and improve governance of the country's population program. The four imperatives aim to assure broad-based socioeconomic development and they include creating productive jobs; investing in and leveraging human capital; enhancing financial inclusion and entrepreneurship, especially for women; and sustaining macroeconomic stability. The president's "Decent Life Initiative" and the "National Project for the Development of the Egyptian Family" can be used as the platform to implement many of the proposed policies and strategies. In such a manner, Egypt will be back on track to achieve its demographic dividend. 2022-08-30T17:38:45Z 2022-08-30T17:38:45Z 2022 Book 978-1-4648-1811-0 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37933 en_US International Development in Focus; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC : World Bank Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Publication Middle East and North Africa Egypt, Arab Republic of
institution Banco Mundial
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country Estados Unidos
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region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND
POPULATION CHALLENGE
TRENDS AND CHANGES
NATIONAL POPULATION STRATEGY
GEOGRAPHIC DISAGGREGATION
GENDER AND SOCIAL NORMS
ECONOMIC IMPACT
FAMILY PLANNING
GIRLS' EDUCATION
AGE AT MARRIAGE
SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMS
GOVERNANCE REFORM
DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND
POPULATION CHALLENGE
TRENDS AND CHANGES
NATIONAL POPULATION STRATEGY
GEOGRAPHIC DISAGGREGATION
GENDER AND SOCIAL NORMS
ECONOMIC IMPACT
FAMILY PLANNING
GIRLS' EDUCATION
AGE AT MARRIAGE
SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMS
GOVERNANCE REFORM
spellingShingle DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND
POPULATION CHALLENGE
TRENDS AND CHANGES
NATIONAL POPULATION STRATEGY
GEOGRAPHIC DISAGGREGATION
GENDER AND SOCIAL NORMS
ECONOMIC IMPACT
FAMILY PLANNING
GIRLS' EDUCATION
AGE AT MARRIAGE
SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMS
GOVERNANCE REFORM
DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND
POPULATION CHALLENGE
TRENDS AND CHANGES
NATIONAL POPULATION STRATEGY
GEOGRAPHIC DISAGGREGATION
GENDER AND SOCIAL NORMS
ECONOMIC IMPACT
FAMILY PLANNING
GIRLS' EDUCATION
AGE AT MARRIAGE
SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMS
GOVERNANCE REFORM
El-Saharty, Sameh (ed.)
Nassar, Heba (ed.)
Shawky, Sherine (ed.)
Elshalakani, Amr (ed.)
Hamza, Mariam M. (ed.)
Zhang, Yi (ed.)
Zeitoun, Nahla (ed.)
Achieving the Demographic Dividend in the Arab Republic of Egypt : Choice, Not Destiny
description The Arab Republic of Egypt was well on the path to achieving its demographic dividend at the turn of this century but has gone off track due to a reversal in its earlier fertility decline. But what is the demographic dividend? It reflects the economic benefits when a country undergoes a rapid decline in mortality, then fertility, and the consequent demographic transition. Due to lower fertility and fewer children per household, a growing working-age population increases productivity and per capita income, leading to accumulated savings, investments, and economic growth, underscoring the strong link between demographics and economic growth. Fortunately, Egypt has the political will, resources, and capacity to achieve its demographic dividend in the next decade, as this report by a team of Egyptian and World Bank experts shows. It reviews the trends in determinants of the rising total fertility rate, the likely factors that contributed to Egypt’s fertility decline reversal, the government’s initial response, and the sectoral and social drivers that may have influenced this fertility decline reversal. It also assesses the economic impact of the demographic changes, including estimates of forgone savings due to the increased fertility and of potential future gains if the country were to regain and then accelerate its fertility decline. Drawing on global evidence, the report proposes six policy and strategic priorities, complemented by four policy imperatives. These priorities aim to increase the contraceptive prevalence rate (the most important of the six), reduce school dropouts, increase female labor force participation, delay early marriage, leverage social protection programs, and improve governance of the country's population program. The four imperatives aim to assure broad-based socioeconomic development and they include creating productive jobs; investing in and leveraging human capital; enhancing financial inclusion and entrepreneurship, especially for women; and sustaining macroeconomic stability. The president's "Decent Life Initiative" and the "National Project for the Development of the Egyptian Family" can be used as the platform to implement many of the proposed policies and strategies. In such a manner, Egypt will be back on track to achieve its demographic dividend.
format Book
topic_facet DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND
POPULATION CHALLENGE
TRENDS AND CHANGES
NATIONAL POPULATION STRATEGY
GEOGRAPHIC DISAGGREGATION
GENDER AND SOCIAL NORMS
ECONOMIC IMPACT
FAMILY PLANNING
GIRLS' EDUCATION
AGE AT MARRIAGE
SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMS
GOVERNANCE REFORM
author El-Saharty, Sameh (ed.)
Nassar, Heba (ed.)
Shawky, Sherine (ed.)
Elshalakani, Amr (ed.)
Hamza, Mariam M. (ed.)
Zhang, Yi (ed.)
Zeitoun, Nahla (ed.)
author_facet El-Saharty, Sameh (ed.)
Nassar, Heba (ed.)
Shawky, Sherine (ed.)
Elshalakani, Amr (ed.)
Hamza, Mariam M. (ed.)
Zhang, Yi (ed.)
Zeitoun, Nahla (ed.)
author_sort El-Saharty, Sameh (ed.)
title Achieving the Demographic Dividend in the Arab Republic of Egypt : Choice, Not Destiny
title_short Achieving the Demographic Dividend in the Arab Republic of Egypt : Choice, Not Destiny
title_full Achieving the Demographic Dividend in the Arab Republic of Egypt : Choice, Not Destiny
title_fullStr Achieving the Demographic Dividend in the Arab Republic of Egypt : Choice, Not Destiny
title_full_unstemmed Achieving the Demographic Dividend in the Arab Republic of Egypt : Choice, Not Destiny
title_sort achieving the demographic dividend in the arab republic of egypt : choice, not destiny
publisher Washington, DC : World Bank
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37933
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