Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts

Friday, May 22, 2026

The Multiplier Effect

Read and Lead

To read and discuss chapters 8 and 9 of Every Last Girl by Safeena Husain

Key Takeaways

  • The "Multiplier Effect": Educating girls yields massive returns, including a 10% wage increase per year of schooling, a 3% national GDP boost for every 10% increase in female secondary completion, and a 4.2M reduction in child deaths.

  • The Core Conflict: The author challenges justifying girls' education for its external benefits, arguing it reinforces patriarchy by valuing a girl for her service to others rather than her intrinsic worth.

  • Educate Girls' Scaled Impact: The organisations AI-driven model accelerated its reach from 345k girls in its first decade to enrolling 4M girls in a single year, mobilising 1.5M previously "invisible" girls.

  • The Ultimate Rationale: The book's central message is captured by a young learner's quote: "I learned to write so I can write my fate," asserting education as a fundamental right for personal agency.

Topics

Recap: AI-Powered Precision Targeting

  • The previous chapter detailed Educate Girls' shift from an inefficient "saturation model" to an AI-powered precision model.

  • Inefficient Saturation Model:

    • Slow: 6 years per district.

    • Wasted resources on villages with no out-of-school girls.

  • AI-Powered Precision Model:

    • Uses a machine learning model trained on 10 years of data from 1M households.

    • Predicts high-need villages, increasing girls found per village from 18 to 42.

    • Enables targeting the 5% of villages containing 40% of all out-of-school girls.

    • Success amplified by aligning with government policies (RTE, Beti Bachao).

Chapter 8: The Multiplier Effect

  • Girls' education is framed as the "highest return investment" in the developing world.

  • Case Study: Andu

    • An educated woman who escaped an abusive marriage and became an Upa Sarpanch (local leader) and Educate Girls coordinator.

    • In her 11-village ward, no girls have been out of school for years.

    • Her leadership led to community-wide improvements:

      • Economic: Women learned animal husbandry, increasing milk production tenfold and enabling small businesses (papad, paper bags).

      • Health: Institutional births became the norm, saving infant lives.

  • Quantified Returns on Investment

    • Economic:

      • 10% wage increase per additional year of schooling.

      • 10% increase in female secondary completion → 3% national GDP growth.

      • 100% upper secondary completion by 2030 → 10% national GDP uplift, adding $15T–$30T to the global economy.

    • Health:

      • Responsible for >50% reduction in under-five child mortality (4.2M lives saved).

      • Universal primary education → 15% reduction in child mortality.

      • Universal secondary education → 49% reduction in child mortality.

    • Social & Political:

      • Increases women's political participation (voters, candidates).

      • Villages with female leadership invest more in women's priorities (water, education).

      • Educated women are more likely to report domestic violence and stand up to discrimination.

    • Environmental:

      • Reduces disaster deaths by 60% if 70% of young women complete lower secondary school.

      • 12 years of education + family planning → 70 gigaton reduction in GHG emissions by 2050.

  • The Core Conflict: Education for Whom?

    • The author challenges the "multiplier effect" argument as patriarchal.

    • Rationale: It justifies education based on a girl's service to others, not her intrinsic worth.

    • Conclusion: If a girl's value isn't recognized as her own, society hasn't truly progressed.

Chapter 9: The Meaning of an Education

  • The chapter opens with a profound quote from a young learner: "I learned to write so I can write my fate."

  • Educate Girls' Growth & Impact

    • The author reflects on the organization's 15th Foundation Day, addressing a 2,000-person team.

    • Scale: Grew from a small team to 22,000 staff across 4 states, reaching 30,000 villages.

    • Acceleration: The AI-driven model enabled a massive increase in impact.

      • First Decade: 345,000 girls secured education.

      • Single Year (2024): 4,000,000 girls supported.

      • Total: 1.5M previously "invisible" girls mobilized.

  • Road Trip to Reconnect

    • The author planned a road trip through Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh.

    • Purpose: To reconnect with field teams and girls, verifying the human impact behind the statistics.


      FATHOM AI-generated notes

Friday, August 16, 2013

National Skill Certification & Monetary Reward Scheme

National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) 
Union Finance Minister P. Chidambaram launched the National Skill Certification and Monetary Reward Scheme here today. Union Minister for Rural Development Jairam Ramesh and Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission Dr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia will also present on the occasion.
This scheme is likely to benefit about one million young men and women in the next 12 months. Chidambaram had first announced the scheme in Parliament in his budget speech for this fiscal, and set aside a provision of 1,000 crore rupees towards this.
He said the National Skill Development Corp will set the curriculum and standards for training in different skills and any institution or body may offer training courses. Upon completion the candidate then has to take a test conducted by authorised agencies.
In his Independence Day address yesterday, the Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh promised a new scheme soon, targeting some one million beneficiaries, under which trained youth will get some form of financial assistance.

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