- World Bank presented a report on celebrating Malala Day
-Today 13.2 crore girls from 6 to 17 years of age are not enrolled in school: World Bank worries
- Less than two-thirds of the girls in poor countries can complete primary education: World Bank emphasizes female education
The World Bank presented a report on female education, in which a worrying picture was found. Since the girls do not receive enough education, the World Bank has expressed that the burden of $ 150 billion to 300 billion is rising.
Women do not get an adequate education, so they do not get the right job. The women who get the opportunity to make the family financially strong. The World Bank emphasized female education, saying that those who do not get education do not get an opportunity to get the financial position of the family.
At the time of the Malala Day celebrations by the United Nations, the World Bank presented the report and said that two-thirds of the girls in low-income poor and developing countries can get a bare primary education only. They do not get higher education opportunities due to economic tension.
In other words, women arriving at the age of earning - who really want to work instead of being in the house - if they were educated at the right time, would have added 150 to 300 billion dollars in world gross earnings today.
According to the World Bank report, on date, 13.2 crore girls from the age group 6 to 17 years of age were not enrolled in the school.
The 21-year-old Nobel Prize winner Malala, said at the celebration of the Malala Day, that 13 million girls could become engineers, physician, journalist, CEO. If he had the opportunity, he would have increased the world's revenue.
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