Girls
are currently less likely to be enrolled in secondary education in Arab
countries and most of Africa ©Tony Karumba (AFP)
|
Developing economies
stand to win an extra US$21 billion (€19 billion) if they improve girls' health
and sex education, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) said Thursday.
AFP
report continues:
Girls
in developing countries are less likely than boys to complete schooling because
of forced marriage, child labour and female genital mutilation, risking the
opportunities presented by their largely young populations, said the study,
launched in London.
"Over
the next 15 years alone, developing countries together stand to gain or forfeit
at least US$21 billion, depending on whether or not they invest in the
well-being, education, and independence of their 10-year-old girls today,"
it said.
"When
the right policies and institutions are in place to build young people's human
capital, a developing country can see dramatic economic growth... leading to a
demographic dividend, a unique opportunity for economic progress and poverty
reduction".
Girls
are currently less likely to be enrolled in secondary education in Arab
countries and most of Africa -— home to 70 per cent of the world's 10-year-olds
today.
Sixteen
million girls aged between six and 11 will never start school -- twice the
number of boys.
"For
10-year-old girls, a potential tripling of their lifetime income is at stake.
For the societies the girls are a part of, the reduction of poverty is at
stake," said the report.
Many
girls fail to finish their education after getting married in early
adolescence, and UNFPA urged countries to impose a minimum age of marriage of
18.
Every
day, an estimated 47,700 girls get married before that age, they said.
Comprehensive
sexuality education programmes should also be expanded to 10-year-old girls in
order to protect their health and take control of their own fertility, it
advised.
"Many
girls may not have a safe forum in which to ask questions about these topics,
which in many communities are still considered taboo," it said.
"Access
to contraceptives for adolescents and women of childbearing age is
crucial."
Babatunde
Osotimehin, Executive Director of UNFPA, stressed at the report's launch that
"boys are also important" but that "they get many more
opportunities than girls".
"This
is an unforgivable injustice and a violation of girls' fundamental
rights," he added.
The
study gave India and China as examples of the progress possible if developing
countries harnessed their youthful populations.
Such booms can lead to increased labour force participation, increased earnings, increased longevity and smaller families, but will only materialize with swift action, warned the study.
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