(Togo First) - As announced on the sidelines of Africa Pulse’s launch at the beginning of this month, the World Bank just released in Bali (Indonesia) its new human capital index. This was in the framework of the Bretton Woods institution's annual assemblies.
The new index measures losses in economic productivity incurred by countries that under-invest in their people. “The human capital index reflects the productivity as a future worker of a child born today, compared with what it could be if he or she had full health and complete, high-quality education,” World Bank explains.
The measure includes :
First results for the new study are quite alarming it appears. Indeed, it shows that 56% of children born today will be deprived of more than half of their potential lifetime earnings because governments are not making necessary investments to produce an educated, resilient and healthy population, ready for the workplace of the future.
According to the World Bank, “if governments take action now, children born today could be in better health, wealthier and more productive when they become adults”.
“For the poorest people, human capital is often the only capital they have,” World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said. “Human capital is a key driver of sustainable, inclusive economic growth, but investing in health and education has not gotten the attention it deserves. This index creates a direct line between improving outcomes in health and education, productivity, and economic growth. I hope that it drives countries to take urgent action and invest more – and more effectively – in their people” he added.
Fiacre E. Kakpo