South Asia’s human capital is the resilience it needs
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This post originally ran as an OpEd in the The Express Tribune on February 21
The last few years have ushered in a harsh new reality where crises are the norm rather than the exception.
COVID-19 alone put millions of lives and livelihoods at risk and its impacts have already undermined decades of development gains.This is deeply distressing because the knowledge, skills and health that people accumulate — their human capital — is a critical source of the resilience that countries rely on for recovery. To strengthen resilience and protect the well-being of future generations, governments across South Asia need to take urgent policy action and invest in human capital.
With nearly half its population under the age of 24 and over one million young people set to enter the labor force every month until 2030, the region could reap an enviably high demographic dividend. But South Asia is also home to over one third of the world’s stunted children. And
These numbers are jarring but will be hard to shift without more resources. South Asian governments on average spend just 1 per cent of GDP on health and 2.5 per cent on education. In comparison, the global average is 5.9 per cent on the former and 3.7 per cent on the latter.
Among its most woeful impacts is a rise in learning poverty, or the inability to read and understand a simple text by age 10. While around the world, on average, schools remained closed for in-person learning between 2020 and 2022 for 141 days, in South Asia they were shut for 225 days. Coupled with ineffective remote instruction, this increased South Asia’s learning poverty from 60 to 78 per cent.
The poorest and most vulnerable people fell further behind. For example, in Bangladesh, the poorest students lost 50 per cent more in terms of learning than the richest students. Several countries still show little to no signs of recovery, and South Asia’s students could lose up to 14.4 per cent of their future earnings.
While the outlook is grim, it’s important to remember that well designed and implemented interventions can make a difference if governments act fast.
In Bangladesh, for example, attending a year of additional pre-school through two-hour sessions significantly improved literacy, numeracy and social-development scores. Meanwhile, in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, six months of extra remedial classes after school helped students catch up on about two-thirds of lost learning linked to 18 months of school closures. And in Nepal, government teachers ran a phone tutoring program that helped increase students’ foundational numeracy by 30 per cent. And Pakistan significantly expanded its flagship Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) and provided urgently needed cash transfers to over 15 million households, one of the largest responses worldwide.Given the high returns to human capital, the huge losses inflicted by the pandemic, and the region’s vulnerability to a variety of shocks, even with constrained government budgets, scaling up these interventions should be a no-brainer.
Collapse and Recovery: How COVID Eroded Human Capital and What to Do About It, which analyses the pandemic’s impacts on young people, stresses the multi-dimensional and complementary nature of human development. The health, education and skills people acquire at various stages of their lives, build and depend on each other. To be effective, human development systems must recognize and exploit these overlapping connections. In other words, they should be agile, resilient, and adaptive.
A new World Bank study,Such systems will help countries better respond to future shocks as well. Crises are unpredictable and often present rapidly changing circumstances. A well-functioning system is one that can spring into action the moment a shock strikes, ensure that essential services such as healthcare and learning remain uninterrupted, and have the flexibility to evolve as needs change such as social protection systems that ramp up to meet urgent needs. Since services are provided by different individual sectors, human development systems must be able to coordinate efficiently across sectors. Lastly, as data and technology play a crucial role in the delivery of services, human development systems should ensure they are effectively used.
It could provide the resilience South Asia needs to prosper in an increasingly volatile world.
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