Authors
James Sumberg, Justin Flynn, Philip Mader, Grace Mwaura, Marjoke Oosterom, Robert Sam‐Kpakra, Ayodele Ibrahim Shittu
Publication date
2020/7
Journal
Development Policy Review
Volume
38
Issue
4
Pages
428-440
Description
Motivation
Youth employment has risen to the top of Africa's development agenda. But there is an often‐ignored tension between the current focus of policy and implementation on self‐employment and entrepreneurship, and the ability of employment in the informal economy to meet the commitment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to “decent work for all”. Formal‐sector employment is more likely to offer decent work, but a policy focus on it can be dismissed as unrealistic, if not elitist.
Purpose
This paper aims to review and synthesize evidence about formal‐sector employment in countries in sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA) and young people's engagement with it, for the purpose of bringing such employment more centrally into policy and interventions to address the continent's youth employment crisis.
Approach and methods
The article reviews evidence provided by selected labour‐market surveys and …
Total citations
2020202120222023202418866
Scholar articles