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Roma Inclusion: An Economic Opportunity for Bulgaria, the Czech Czech Republic, Romania, and Serbia. Marijana Jasarevic & Joost de Laat Human Development Economics Europe and Central Asia Vice Presidency. What is the economic argument for Roma inclusion?
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Roma Inclusion: An Economic Opportunity for Bulgaria, the Czech Czech Republic, Romania, and Serbia MarijanaJasarevic & Joost de Laat Human Development Economics Europe and Central Asia Vice Presidency
What is the economic argument for Roma inclusion? World Bank Study tries to answer this: Countries: Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Romania, Serbia Quantitative analysis: 7 household surveys Qualitative analysis: interviews with 222 stakeholders
Four Key Messages * Roma inclusion is smart economics (a) current labor market integration of Roma is poor (b) there are large economic benefits of equal labor market opportunities for Roma (c) Benefits outweigh costs of educating Roma * Roma want to contribute and have the potential to do so * There is knowledge about what works for Roma integration * Resources are available
Roma with jobs earn much less than non-Roma Roma earnings among those with a job relative to non-Roma with jobs
Young Roma are entering labor markets at much higher rates than aging majority populations
Equal labor market opportunities would generate billions of euros annually in extra output
Equal labor market opportunities would generate fiscal benefits of hundreds of millions of euros annually
Fiscal benefits are many times larger than the public spending on education Assume it would cost 50% more per Roma child Assume Roma currently complete primary and 10% completes secondary Assume no Roma attends pre-primary or tertiary Fiscal benefits would be >3 times the needed resources to bridge education gap
Four Key Messages Roma inclusion is smart economics Roma want to contribute and have the potential to do so There is knowledge about what works for Roma integration Resources are available
Facts do not accord with common perceptions: Roma want to work but cannot find jobs Male LFP Female LFP
Facts do not accord with common perceptions: vast majority of Roma do not depend on social assistance
Education facts accord with perceptions: the vast majority of Roma do not have a secondary education or higher
Education and Employment Policies to Enhance Roma Inclusion Improve outcomes of working-age population through employment activation Improving school readiness Improving secondary completion Rigorously evaluating programs to learn which specific ones are most effective to improve results and generate public support for proven programs
Resources are available National resources and EU structural funds are available for Roma inclusion – and can be used for Roma inclusion! Necessary: (a) Information exchange what works (b) Building capacity for multi-sector approaches (c) Forming partnerships to use available resources more!
Policy Note Available: www.worldbank.org/roma