14
EuropeAid Promoting Social inclusion and combating poverty in the ENP Countries Workshop : youth employability Brussels, 3 December 2010 Hélène Bourgade Head of Unit European Commission EuropeAid/E3 Social and human development and migration Youth Employability Workshop

Aidco Promoting Social inclusion and combating poverty in the ENP Countries

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Youth employability session

Citation preview

EuropeAid

Promoting Social inclusion and combating povertyin the ENP Countries

Workshop : youth employability

Brussels, 3 December 2010

Hélène BourgadeHead of Unit

European Commission EuropeAid/E3

Social and human development and migration

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAid

Youth and Social Inclusion: a priority!

• Youth unemployment – in particular women - is widespread and further increase after the financial crisis

• Persisting gaps in initial education and training systems force too many young people to leave school and remain unprepared for work and life

• Young people often work in the informal sector with low wages and unsafe working conditions

Youth education and employment: starting point for social inclusion through employability

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAid

International and EU external Policy Framework

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAid

The ENP scenario

• Over 76 million young people (aged 15-24) live in the ENP countries

(including Russia), representing 19% of the region’s total population

• Youth unemployment rate on average more than 20%

• Quality of jobs often poor, with half of the employed in the informal

economy

• The highest youth unemployment rates in the Region: Armenia, OPT,

Egypt, Georgia and Tunisia.

Large part of the ENP young people continue remaining outside economic

and social life

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAid

EC Instruments for Youth Employability

1)ENPI Bilateral/regional cooperation (directly/non directly targeting youth)

• Sector reforms (Education, VET)• Tempus and Erasmus Mundus (higher education), EuroMed

Youth (non formal eductaion)

2) Thematic Programmes (targeting youth)

• Investing in People• Non State Actors and Local Authorities (NSA-LA)• Migration & Asylum

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAid

EC external approach for Youth Employability

(I)

• Recognition of youth needs and challenges

• Achieving basic education for all and promoting quality education

• Preventing and tackling child labour

• Supporting labour market-driven modernisation of vocational and in service training systems

• Tapping the potential of skills development in the informal economy

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAid

EC external approach for Youth Employability

(II)

• Developing career guidance/counselling/employment services

• Promoting income-generating activities in ICT and culture

• Support retraining programmes in the context of industrial restructuring (textiles, transports, etc.)

• Supporting local development (women inclusion)

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAid

EC external operational modalities

Paris declaration (2005), Accra common framework (2008) Ensuring programmes ownership, supporting home grown reforms

Backbone strategy (2008): enhancing use of home HR, reducing external project management units and TA expenses

Reducing stand alone projects and promoting sector supports as much as possible via budget supports

Sector dialogue – Holistic Approach

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAidBilateral ENP cooperation: some examples

2000-2010 (I)

• Promoting literacy (Morocco 17M€)

• Supporting basic education (Egypt 140M€, Algeria 14M€, Tunisia 30 M€, Lebanon

14M€)

• Supporting reforms of Higher Education (Algeria 21M€, Tunisia 45M€, Syria 20M€)

• Modernisation of VET systems (Morocco 88 M€, Algeria 30M€, Tunisia 85M€, Syria

21M€, Egypt 33M€, Jordan 35M€, OPT 4M€, Armenia 16M€, Georgia 19M€, Azerbaijan

2,6M€)

• Supporting Education needs of Iraqis refugees (Jordan 26.68M€)

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAidBilateral ENP cooperation: some examples

2000-2010 (II)

• Improvement of employability of young Palestinian refugees (Lebanon 4 M€)

• Promoting Employment/Placement services (Algeria 14M€)

• Employability (Tunisia 65M€ within Education/Training/Higher Education 2010)

• Supporting Local and Social Development (Egypt 20 M€, Lebanon 18M€, Algeria

50M€)

• Promoting Decent work and tackling child labour (Syria 2.5M€, Egypt 20M€)

• Supporting Social Protection (Syria 2.5, OPT 40M€, Moldova 20M€, Egypt 20 M€)

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAid

Thematic programmes: some targeted projects for youth

• Migration and Asylum: “Strengthening the Moldova capacity to manage labour and

return migration within the framework of the mobility partnership” (3M€)

• Investing in people: multicountry and innovative projects in the calls for proposals

« Towards demand-driven Technical and Vocational Education and Training systems”

(2008; 5.8M €) and « TVET in informal economy »(2009; 17M€)

• NSA-LA: Youth employment resource centre in Azerbaijan (0.16 M€); Vocational and

business skillls in Abkhazia Georgia (0.28M€)

Youth Employability Workshop

EuropeAid

How the EU external cooperation can contribute to youth employability? (I)

• Ensure that youth and youth inclusion issues are adequately covered in programming

• Engage a multi-sectoral “youth inclusion” policy dialogue (where appropiate) and develop multi sectoral youth programmes (when conditions are met) to foster youth as a cross-cutting issue in national development strategies

• Support the development and implementation of national action plan on youth employment as a way to establish an integrated and youth friendly concept of employment policy

EuropeAidHow the EU external cooperation can contribute to youth employability? (II)

• Encourage job creation through youth entrepreneurship

• Ensure complementarity between bilateral regional and thematic programmes

• Foster partnerships, dissemination of good practices of youth programmes

EuropeAid

Helene BourgadeEuropean Commission - EuropeAid