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Youth EmploymentProgramsAn Evaluati
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The Bank’s Impact Evaluations on
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LACLICLILMBAMENANEETNGOOECDPADPCRPD
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IEG management and colleagues provi
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Youth Employment ChallengesIn gener
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implemented 12 of the 90 operations
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Kenya, entrepreneurship training fo
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• Help countries design intervent
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support to youth employment program
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tive rules on hiring and firing as
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Management Action RecordIEG Finding
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IEG Findings and ConclusionsIEG Rec
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IEG Findings and ConclusionsIEG Rec
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Report to the Board from the Commit
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- Page 44 and 45: ReferencesBegg, David, Stanley Fisc
- Page 47 and 48: Chapter 2What Are the World Bank an
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- Page 51 and 52: Interventions to Address Youth Empl
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- Page 58 and 59: • the substitution effect of bett
- Page 61 and 62: Chapter 3What Is the Evidence that
- Page 63 and 64: school dropouts early. Learning opp
- Page 65 and 66: evaluations on what works best to p
- Page 67 and 68: Agriculture, Health, Education, Soc
- Page 69: Holzmann, Robert. 2007. MILES: Iden
- Page 72 and 73: • Chapter Highlights• The Bank
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- Page 78 and 79: facilitated 69 foreign work contrac
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- Page 82 and 83: • Comparing the interventions ana
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- Page 88 and 89: This evaluation examines youth empl
- Page 91 and 92: Appendix AConceptual Foundation of
- Page 93 and 94: growth, such as India, 2 casual job
- Page 95 and 96: Finally, during business downswings
- Page 97 and 98: Contract flexibility and low firing
- Page 99 and 100: can only have a limited impact. Int
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- Page 104 and 105: This appendix describes the sources
- Page 106 and 107: Table B.2Distribution of Projects S
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- Page 112 and 113: Identification and Analysis of the
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- Page 116 and 117: Table B.7List of Countries for Coun
- Page 118 and 119: Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL), the Nat
- Page 120 and 121: Table B.8CountryBosnia andHerzegovi
- Page 122 and 123: Table B.8CountrySwedenTunisiaUnited
- Page 124 and 125: Table B.8CountryUganda16 EastAsiana
- Page 126 and 127: equesting that they complete an onl
- Page 128 and 129: Gritz, Mark, and Terry Johnson. 200
- Page 131 and 132: Appendix CStrategies and Collaborat
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- Page 135 and 136: Box C.3The Youth Employment Network
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Appendix DThe World Bank Portfolio
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Table D.1CountryYouth Employment Op
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Table D.2Distribution of Youth Empl
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evaluated. Also, in middle-income c
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Table D.6 Prevalence of Project Obj
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Table D.8Prevalence of Project Obje
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Table D.10Intervention typeType of
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Table D.12Percent of projects with
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Figure D.3% of operationswith inter
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macroeconomic conditions were rathe
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Appendix EThe IFC Portfolio for You
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IFC’s Portfolio ReviewYouth has n
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Table E.1Net Job Creation by IFC—
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of August 2010, while the targeted
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Figure E.3Regional Distribution of
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Between FY06 and FY11, IFC provided
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Figure E.5Skill Needs Versus Firm-O
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Appendix FLessons from Impact Evalu
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sales and employment effect is not
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slightly from 21.6 percent in 2005
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a microfinance institute in Peru en
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Wage Subsidies to Provide Incentive
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Box F.3The Tunisia Internship Activ
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egulations, as well as improving th
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These industrial changes in middle-
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secondary education), China (86 com
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Box F.5IFC’s Efforts to Provide T
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(MBA) institutes to ensure these in
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The Juventud y Empleo program in th
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Canagarajah, Sudharshan, and Matin
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Kugler, Adriana D. 2005. “The Eff
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Appendix GSocial Media Outreach Goa
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of students and interns visiting th
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Employment in Rural AreasQuestion:
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Notes1. The # symbol, called a hash
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———. 2011b. “Project Perfor
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Recent IEG PublicationsThe World Ba
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World Bank and IFC Support for Yout