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Sub-Saharan Africa has the youngest population of any region of the
world, and that growing working-age population represents a major
opportunity to reduce poverty and increase shared prosperity. But
the region's workforce is the least skilled in the world,
constraining economic prospects. Despite economic growth, declining
poverty, and investments in skills-building, too many students in
too many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa are not acquiring the
foundational skills they need to thrive and prosper in an
increasingly competitive global economy. This report examines the
balancing act that individuals and countries face in making
productive investments in both a wide range of skills - cognitive,
socio-emotional, and technical - and a wide range of groups - young
children through working adults - so that Sub-Saharan Africa will
thrive.
Pension systems in Europe and Central Asia are facing unprecedented
challenges. While many of the countries in the region have
undertaken reforms when their economies encounter diffi cult times,
these reforms are frequently reversed as soon as the situation
improves. However, the demographic trends in the region require
new, sustained efforts toward changing the pension system to
provide adequate yet sustainable benefi ts. The Inverting Pyramid
documents the progressive generosity of pension systems in Europe
since inception, with current popular expectations based on recent
generous promises, which are neither based on historically
customary practice nor affordable over time. The increased
generosity in the past was driven by the assumption of a
demographic pyramid with an ever expanding base of young people,
but the last decades have revealed that the pyramid is beginning to
invert in some countries, with fewer young people at the bottom and
many more elderly people on top, making that generosity no longer
affordable. Returning to the generosity of the pension system of
the 1970s will go a long way toward providing adequate and
sustainable benefi ts in the future. However, a more sustainable
system will also require labor market reforms, improvements in
savings mechanisms, and in many cases additional public resources.
The extent to which a country can undertake reforms in labor
markets, savings, and public fi nances can infl uence the extent to
which its pension system will need to change, with different
solutions possible for different countries. But in all cases, the
changes that need to be made have to be widely discussed and
publicly accepted to prevent painful reversals. The book hopes to
stimulate widespread public discussion of the issue so that
countries can make sustainable choices with gradual plementation,
before they face such daunting challenges that they have to
undertake sudden harsh measures.
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