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Presented by: Nahla Zeitoun Programme Analyst, UNDP Egypt.

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Presentation on theme: "Presented by: Nahla Zeitoun Programme Analyst, UNDP Egypt."— Presentation transcript:

1 Presented by: Nahla Zeitoun Programme Analyst, UNDP Egypt

2  Why Evidence-based data for EHDRs?  Prominent Institutions Producing Statistics In Egypt  Data sources used for EHDRs Censuses and Surveys Administrative Records Special Surveys commissioned for EHDRs Case Studies  EHDR Statistical Annexes  Newly Proposed indices and indicators  Advantages and Disadvantages of Statistical Sources  Advantages of Disaggregated HDI

3  To give a full picture of issue discussed and assess extent of problem  Rigorous methodologies in data collection are needed given the wide audience of EHDRs and their massive impact  EHDR statistics feed into policy discussions over important issues such as national programs, budgets …  EHDR statistics are cited by students and professors in researches and papers

4  Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS): The official governmental agency for statistics (National statistical arm) Conducts surveys  Institute of National Planning (INP) affiliated to the Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation  Information and Decision Support Center (IDSC): Local offices at sub-national level Public Opinion Poll Center EgyInfo: the first Egyptian adaptation of the UN data mapping software “DevInfo”, launched in cooperation with UNICEF Local Level Portals

5  Population, Housing and Establishments Census:  carried out by CAPMAS every 10 years  Demographic and Health Survey (DHS):  produced every 2-3 years to measure Key population & health indicators  Household Income, Expenditure and Consumption Survey (HIECS):  conducted by CAPMAS every two years (used to be every 5 years)  Egypt Labor Market Survey (ELMS):  Published by the Economic Research Forums in cooperation with the Population Council and CAPMAS to study the dynamics of the labor market  Statistical Year Book: published by CAPMAS

6  Data from Ministries (Petroleum, Higher Education, Finance, Health, Agriculture and Land Reclamation, Water Resources and Irrigation…)  Data from Governmental Institutions such as the Supreme Council of Universities…

7  Survey on Young People in Egypt (SYPE): provides a comprehensive picture of the profile of young people in Egypt, and highlights the main issues that face this important segment of the population. (2010 EHDR)  World Value Survey (2010 EHDR): a worldwide investigation of socio-cultural and political change that was applied to Egypt to survey the basic values and beliefs of the public.  Perception Surveys: such as the specially tailored Semi- Participatory Assessment Survey (SPAS) introduced in the 1996 EHDR to e xplore people’s perceptions regarding living conditions

8 Special qualitative case studies have been produced for many EHDRs These national and international case studies offer policy alternatives Some case studies are produced in a participatory manner i.e.: 2008 EHDR Competition : ◦ Launched a competition to promote best practice CSOs in Egypt ◦ 10 best practice CSOs were selected and their profiles published

9 Annex includes Indicators at the National and Governorate level i.e.  HDI calculations (life expectancy, GDP per capita, Education)  Human Deprivation (Poverty, malnourishment, illiteracy)  Income Distribution, Poverty and Social Investment (GINI coefficient, public expenditures, social security)  Labor force ( wage earners, professionals and technicians, employees in the public sector), unemployment  Status of Women (Maternal mortality rate, education enrollment ratios, women in labor force, child survival and development  Female-Male gap  Participation in Development ( participation in economic activities, informal sector, handcraft activities…)

10  Urbanization and rural-urban Gap  Demographic Profile (contraceptive prevalence, population growth, fertility rate)  Health Profile (health units, doctors, nurses, public expenditures on health)  Communications (internet subscribers, telephone, cell phone subscribers)  Natural resources (irrigated land, water consumption, renewable water resources, land area, cultivated area, population density, fish catch…)  Energy Consumption (electricity, commercial energy consumption)  Food Security (agricultural production, imports, exports, calories per capita)  Resource Flow Imbalances (remittances, trade dependency…)  National Income Accounts and economic performance

11  Introduced in the 2010 EHDR  Includes eleven dimensions to monitor the levels and severity of youth deprivation  Assesses progress on youth indicators in access to services, income and deprivation, gender, employment, as well as civic participation, family life, leisure, and security.  Measures progress in youth well-being over time  Raises awareness on all aspects of youth welfare  Situates Egypt’s youth as compared to youth in other countries

12 2- HDI at Sub-National Level  Only Introduced in the 2002/2003 EHDR  Innovative approach to calculate the HDI at the local (village/markaz) level to give a comprehensive picture of human development in the country’s 451 sub-administrative units.  Provides a lens through which policy makers can look in detail at specific pockets of poverty or deprivation.

13  3- Governance Assessments Indicators  New generation of governance indicators developed by the Oslo Governance Center and discussed in the 2008 EHDR  Measure various dimensions of the operational policy and regulatory framework.  Four groups of governance indicators are explored: 1.Public sector management 2.Corruption 3.Justice 4.Human rights.

14  Population censuses have the advantage of their complete coverage, but they have also the weakness of being frequently out-of-date  Household surveys have the advantage of being up-dated but they have the problem of often insufficient or ill-defined statistical representativeness  Administrative records have the advantage of being permanently up- dated but the disadvantage of their varying coverage and definitions.

15  Disaggregated for different groups: Geographic or administrative, urban/rural, gender, ethnicity, etc.  Help highlight significant disparities and gaps and help redirect policy/budget.  Can be used for local communities as pressure tool, for participatory planning, accountability, etc. Could be difficult to do because of lack of data

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