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Gender differences in the effects of vocational training: constraints on women and drop-out behavior

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Abstract

This paper provides experimental evidence on the effects of vocational and entrepreneurial training for Malawian youth, in an environment where access to schooling and formal sector employment is extremely low. It tracks a large fraction of program drop-outs -- a common phenomenon in the training evaluation literature -- and examines the determinants and consequences of dropping out and how it mediates the effects of such programs. The analysis finds that women make decisions in a more constrained environment, and their participation is affected by family obligations. Participation is more expensive for them, resulting in worse training experience. The training results in skills development, continued investment in human capital, and improved well-being, with more positive effects for men, but no improvements in labor market outcomes in the short run.

Author
Cho, Yoonyoung
Kalomba, Davie
Mobarak, Ahmed Mushfiq
Orozco, Victor
Corporate Author
World Bank. Development Research Group
World Bank. Human Development Network
World Bank. Africa Region
Year of publication
2013
Imprint
Washington,D.C. (World Bank, 2013, p.48)
Linguistic region
Country (Geographical area)
Source database
curatED
Language