Africa’s natural wealth is enormous. Growing investments in infrastructure and a better business climate are helping to translate this wealth into productive physical capital. The continent’s large and growing youth population could also promote economic growth. However, what slows Africa’s social and economic transformation relative to other regions of the world is the lagging stock, composition, quality, and accumulation rate of its knowledge capital.
Climate change education effects on worldwide schoolchildren and their entourage
The Commons : Drivers of Change and Opportunities for Africa by
Social Contracts for Development by World Bank Publications - Issuu
PDF) The Commons Drivers of Changes and Opportunities for Africa
Sectoral aid in practice by Agence Française de Développement - Issuu
Crises and the COVID-19 pandemic: education responses and choices during times of disruptions by Education International - Issuu
Transforming Education: AFD Group has Solutions in its Satchel
Private Sector and Developmeent - Special issue - Africa France New Summit by Agence Française de Développement - Issuu
Children in Africa five times less likely to learn basics: New report
Schooling for Learning in Africa: facing forward with VVOB
PDF) ESID Working Paper No. 163: What next for the political economy of development in Africa? Facing up to the challenge of economic transformation