Type | Working Paper |
Title | Evolution of Opportunities for Early Childhood Development in Arab Countries |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
URL | https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2816411 |
Abstract | This study uses 36 standardized population and health surveys – Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys, Demographic and Health Surveys and Pan-Arab Project for Family Health – from sixteen countries for years 2002–2015 to assess the evolution of early childhood opportunities in countries across the Arab region. Fifteen indicators for children’s basic opportunities – including qualified care for mothers during pregnancy and child delivery, children’s access to minimum nutrition, health, parental care and developmental activities – are assessed. The typical level of opportunities, inequality in opportunities across various socio-economic groups, and household characteristics responsible for the inequality are reviewed. The study concludes that access to ECD opportunities is largely inadequate and subject to vast inequality across the Arab region as well as within countries – particularly children’s height, access to iodized salt, enrolment in nurseries and preschool programs, cognitive stimulation at home, and violent disciplining. Across most countries, children’s height falls behind in the first two years of children’s life, suggesting that this is a crucial period in which a targeted institutional intervention could be most fruitful. While ECD opportunities are improving and becoming more equal over time across many countries, progress is uneven. For the rates of skilled care during child delivery, child immunization, and enrolment in preschool programs, access is deteriorating, perhaps reflecting low priority given to them in public policy. Among Arab countries, a number of indicators were deteriorating in Djibouti, Mauritania and Syria. Surprisingly, countries experiencing uprisings fare better than other Arab countries in terms of the level and trends in ECD opportunities. |