Introduction of Technical Assistance for Early Childhood Development (ECD) for the Poor in Vietnam (TA VIE 4205)



 

The context in Vietnam

 

The Government of Vietnam has long placed children at the center of its human capital investments. The late President Ho Chi Minh was specially referring to young children when he said “when we grow a tree, it has a value for 10 years. But when we educate a person, that has value for one hundred years”

 

Viet Nam has seen remarkable development since Doi Moi or renewal (1986), with strong economic growth, significant poverty reduction, and noticeable improvements in the human capital of the population. Gross Domestic Product has grown during the past 10 years by almost 300% and per capita income by almost 500%. Viet Nam has made substantial progress in meeting the Millennium Development Goals: reducing poverty from 58% to 17.15% between 1993 and 2001; reaching near universal primary enrollment; and increasing substantially the access to health care. Viet Nam has reduced infant and child mortality substantially, with infant mortality dropping from 44.2 per 1,000 in 1992 to around 18.0 in 2004.

 

Despite these overall gains there are concerns about the quality of human capital and growing income and human capital inequality. Although mortality has declined, levels of malnutrition remain high.  During the 1990s, the level of child malnutrition (measured by the height for age) has remained stable, with about a third of children stunted.  There is significant and growing regional inequality and many communes have not fully benefited from the development seen in the past decade. Evidence shows that the living standards of the poorest 30% of the population have not increased substantially during the 1990s and that children from poor households have not received the same level of investment as their peers. Access to critical prenatal care, facilities for attended births, and health care for infants is often limited or inaccessible to poor women particularly in mountainous, remote areas, and difficult areas. Children from poor and vulnerable households often have little access to daycare, preschool and kindergarten, while home-based caregivers often lack knowledge of early childhood, which puts them at a disadvantage compared to other children when they enter primary school.

 

Continued progress in poverty reduction requires more targeted and focused interventions aimed at improving the welfare of groups that have not benefited from economic growth and social development. Numerous studies have shown the long-term negative effect of low investment in the first years, including a reduced capacity to work, lower intellectual development, and limited motor and social skills. In essence, children face the risk of being trapped in a vicious circle of poverty, as their parents cannot afford necessary investment in their human capital that they will need as adults to escape from poverty.

 

Government investment in ECD has been low but is increasing. ECD crosses the traditional sectoral boundaries and the Government has developed a number of strategies and policies to promote ECD, particularly focusing on households in poor and remote regions and in difficult circumstances. The Program for Action for Children, 2001-2010, is an omnibus program that establishes quantitative targets and goals for children, covering both health and education. In addition, the Population Strategy of Vietnam, 2001-2010, the National Strategy for Reproductive Health Care, 2001-2010, the Education Strategy, 2001-2010, and the National Strategy for Nutrition, 2001-2010, all specifically promote ECD as key to sustainable and long-term poverty reduction.

 

Early Childhood Development

 

Early childhood development (ECD) incorporates this holistic view of child development. It focuses on the importance of providing the essential supports that a young child needs to survive and succeed in life as well as the supports a family and community need to promote healthy child development. It is a relatively new field which is based on developmental psychology and child rights, and combines elements from the areas of health and nutrition, community development, sociology, and economics.

 

The first years of life are the most critical and formative to future growth and development. This is when the brain matures and personality develops and when psychological and social patterns of bonding with caregivers and the community at large are established. For children, there is a strong synergistic relationship among health, nutrition and development. Children must receive adequate protection, food, and health in addition to affection, interaction and stimulation, and learning through exploration and discovery. All areas of survival, growth and development are intimately related and mutually supportive. Failing to invest in one critical area will lower the child’s capacity to grow in other areas.

 

The Technical Assistance

 

ADB has been active in promoting human development in Viet Nam, with projects in health, nutrition, population, and education. The Partnership Agreement signed between and the Government and ADB identifies inclusive social development as an important area for continued cooperation in achieving the joint agenda of poverty reduction. ADB support for ECD, is a logical and supportive extension of these activities and is an important avenue for focusing ADB's support for poverty reduction on children.

 

The long-term goal of the TA is to support Viet Nam in the development of a safe and healthy environment for children from poor and vulnerable households that will provide them with greater opportunity to reach their full human potential. To achieve this long-term goal, the TA has several objectives including: (i) understanding the current status and availability of ECD programs, particularly in poor and remote areas; (ii) developing appropriate qualitative and quantitative survey instruments for the TA and for research and policy work in ECD; and (iii) increasing stakeholders' awareness and support for ECD as a key instrument to break the vicious circle of poverty.

 

The main outputs of the TA include: (i) a detailed needs assessment of ECD, including child health, nutrition, childcare, and preschool education, and (ii) an integrated investment strategy to advocate and promote ECD, including identification of the financing gap and identification of financing sources. 

 

 

The TA team includes national and international specialists on early child health and nutrition; early childhood education and economist who have been working under the leadership of a team leader as well as the Project Steering Committee chaired by the Viet Nam CPFC and members from lin Ministries (health, education, labor-invaldi and social affaires, cultural and communication). A project management unit based on Scientific Institute for Population, Family and Children (VCPFC) has been established to provide administrative and management support for the TA team.

 

The team has cooperated well with relevant institutions, organizations and ministries to conduct consultations, workshops (at national avd provincial level), forums, data analysis, field studies to the three technical component reports on early child health and nutrition; early childhood education and ECD investment. Strategic recommendations are included in the TA general report and published in English annd Vietnamese.

 

 

The TA “Early childhood development for the poor ” funded by ADB offically commence in November 2003 and end in June 2006.


 

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