New PEP-Mastercard Foundation partnership for evidence to improve youth work in Africa

January 24, 2022 | Nairobi, Kenya

PEP announces a new three-year partnership with the Mastercard Foundation to understand what works for accelerating youth employment in Africa.

PEP is partnering with the Mastercard Foundation for a three-year initiative on “What Works for Youth Employment in Africa”. It aims to provide evidence that can drive policy reform to increase youth employment in ten African countries. 

The evidence and resources to be generated by this initiative will promote more inclusive and rewarding work opportunities for young people, especially women and other marginalized groups. The initiative aligns with the Mastercard Foundation’s Young Africa Works strategy that seeks to enable 30 million young Africans, and particularly women, to access dignified and fulfilling work by 2030.

Teams of local researchers and policy stakeholders will carry out gender-aware policy and impact reviews in each of the ten countries. The analysis and findings from these reviews will establish a body of knowledge on youth employment policy in Africa and be gathered in a new online knowledge repository. 

This extensive and well-organized repository will provide access to resources and evidence to government officials, youth organizers, and other stakeholders. It will help policymakers and practitioners design more efficient, scalable and better-targeted programs that can drive youth employment on the continent.

“PEP’s research-policy coproduction model combined with a consultative approach seeks to foster ownership of the project outputs by the government, policy practitioners, and beneficiaries in each country,” said Professor Jane Mariara, Executive Director of PEP. 

“Mobilizing and uniting a range of stakeholders, including youth and youth organizations, as part of this approach should ensure the sustainability of the initiative and the long-term adoption of evidence-informed policymaking,” she said.

In many countries, youth work strategies have developed in a fragmented manner, with the duplication of some policies while other potentially high-impact areas are neglected. For similar reasons, government financing is often spread too thin to achieve the policy objectives. 

“To be able to make equitable and sustainable decisions, policymakers urgently need access to a body of knowledge and evidence that will provide insights about emerging trends in the marketplace, real and potential disruptions, and current and future opportunities," said Prof. Mariara. 

“Youth unemployment remains a critical challenge and opportunity for the continent. But, to tap into the power of young people to drive economic growth we need a clearer sense of what works—and just as importantly what doesn’t work—to enable opportunity. This information is critical for all decision makers,” said Daniel Hailu, Mastercard Foundation Regional Head, Eastern and Southern Africa.

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FUNDED BY

Logo global affairs canada
Logo Hewlett Foundation
Logo Co-Impact
Logo BMGF
Logo IDRC - CRDI Canada
Logo Mastercard Foundation