The following article caught my attention online. I certainly agree and hope that you do too. We are investing in girls and see great rewards.
Invest in Girls
Posted on February 3, 2009
World Economic Forum Panel Discussion Focuses on Investing in Adolescent Girls
During a plenary session at the World Economic Forum's annual meeting this past weekend in Davos, Switzerland, leaders of foundations, corporations, nongovernmental organizations, and government agencies discussed how investing in the education of girls could help rejuvenate many of the world's economies, the Associated Press reports.
Moderated by CARE USA president and CEO Helene Gayle, the discussion included Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation co-chair Melinda French Gates, World Bank managing director Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Indonesian minister of trade Mari Pangestu, Nike CEO Mark G. Parker, UNICEF executive director Ann M. Veneman, and Grameen Bank managing director Muhammad Yunus.
Despite efforts by the NoVo, Nike and United Nations foundations, only about half a cent of every international development dollar currently goes toward girls.
To help address this dearth of funding, the panelists identified how to increase investment in programs that help girls and discussed the importance of reaching women in early adolescence - before they're faced with issues that can derail a healthy and prosperous life, including early marriage, early pregnancy, and HIV/AIDS.
By providing girls with education and economic-based opportunities, said Parker, there is "a direct connection to shaping the post-crisis world" because girls will help transform their families, their villages, and ultimately their countries. "This isn't necessarily a question of adding more funds. It's a question of directing some of the funds that are already out there to...give us a higher return and give us higher impact."
Okonjo-Iweala urged support for a $20 million public-private partnership to educate and train girls in post-conflict countries, noting that 70 percent of the 130 million children out of school today are girls. "If investing in women is smart economics, then investing in girls...is even smarter economics," Okonjo-Iweala said. "If you invest in girls, if you educate girls, if you get girls into jobs, you solve many problems."
Lederer, Edith. "World Economic Forum: Invest in Girls to Combat Poverty." Associated Press 2/01/09.