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Title page
Contents
Abbreviations 2
Acknowledgements 4
Executive Summary 12
1. Introduction 19
1.1. How can we achieve better development outcomes for all? 22
1.2. How does Socio-Economic Survey of Refugees in Ethiopia (SESRE) contribute to the debate on policies? 24
2. Sociodemographic Profile 27
2.1. Demographic Characteristics 27
2.2. Education 30
2.3. Health and Nutrition 37
2.4. Living Conditions 41
3. Jobs and Livelihoods 45
3.1. Labor market outcomes of in-camp refugees and their hosts 48
3.2. Labor market outcomes of OCP refugees and their hosts 57
3.3. Refugee Youth 61
4. Refugees' Aspirations 64
5. Welfare and Equity 67
5.1. Welfare dimensions 67
5.1.1. Monetary Poverty and Inequality 67
5.1.2. Expenditure Patterns 69
5.1.3. Multidimensional Poverty 71
5.1.4. Food Security 73
5.1.5. Shocks and Coping Strategies 74
5.2. Determinants of Welfare 75
5.3. Cost of Basic Needs for Refugees 80
6. Markets and Opportunities 84
6.1. Spatial disparities in refugees labor market access and outcomes 85
6.2. Effects of local factors on refugees' labor market outcomes 89
7. Social Cohesion 92
7.1. Attitudes between refugees and hosts 92
7.2. Social interactions 98
8. Policy Recommendations 102
References 107
Annex A: Description of Refugees by Country of Origin 116
Annex B: Refugee Policies in Ethiopia 119
Annex C: Survey Design and Methodology 128
Sample population 128
Sampling design 130
Sample size estimation 130
Annex D: Descriptive Statistics and Regression Results 134
Results on Sociodemographic Profile 134
Results on Jobs and Livelihoods 144
Results on Refugees' Aspirations 150
Results on Welfare and Equity 151
Results on Markets and Opportunities 154
Results on Social Cohesion 159
Annex E: Robustness Checks of Refugees' Consumption 163
Annex F: Comparison of results from Skills Profile Survey and SESRE 167
Table 2.1. Household characte 30
Table 3.1. Labor force statistics 49
Table 3.2. Labor force statistics 58
Table 3.3. Youth labor force statistics (age 15-24) 62
Figure ES.1. Desired location in three years 14
Figure ES.2. Expected location in three years 14
Figure ES.3. Poverty incidence 15
Figure ES.4. Food insecurity scale 15
Figure ES.5. Refugee employment and proximity to resource hubs 16
Figure ES.6. Host response to "Refugees are good people" 17
Figure ES.7. Host response to "Would you feel comfortable having a refugee as a neighbor?" 17
Figure 1.1. Refugees and asylum seekers in Ethiopia by country of origin, 1984-2023 19
Figure 2.1. Refugees by survey domain 27
Figure 2.2. Country of birth 27
Figure 2.3. Refugees arrival in Ethiopia (15 years and above) 28
Figure 2.4. Age structure 29
Figure 2.5. Gender composition 29
Figure 2.6. Marital status (18 years and above) 29
Figure 2.7. Education level (18 years and above) 32
Figure 2.8. Youth (15 to 24) education level 32
Figure 2.9. Refugees' education outside of Ethiopia (18 years and above) 33
Figure 2.10. Children currently attending school 34
Figure 2.11. Gross Enrollment Rate (GER) 35
Figure 2.12. Net Enrollment Rate (NER) 35
Figure 2.13. Share of children and youth above school age in education 35
Figure 2.14. Reasons for not currently attending school 36
Figure 2.15. Faced any health problem 38
Figure 2.16. Received medical assistance when faced with health problem 38
Figure 2.17. Use of the national healthcare system when faced with health problems 39
Figure 2.18. Child nutritional indicators 41
Figure 2.19. Presence of any disability 41
Figure 2.20. Dwelling type 42
Figure 2.21. Housing quality 42
Figure 2.22. Access to drinking water and hygiene 43
Figure 2.23. Access to toilet facility and waste disposal 43
Figure 2.24. Source of lighting 44
Figure 3.1. Top 3 difficulties with being a refugee 46
Figure 3.2. Work status 49
Figure 3.3. Work type 50
Figure 3.4. Occupation 50
Figure 3.5. Work status by gender 50
Figure 3.6. In-camp refugee share employed by age 50
Figure 3.7. Female work type 51
Figure 3.8. Female occupations 51
Figure 3.9. Refugee work location 52
Figure 3.10. Hours per week 52
Figure 3.11. Hourly earnings 52
Figure 3.12. Share employed by age - camp refugees 53
Figure 3.13. Share employed by age - camp hosts 53
Figure 3.14. Household owns crops 54
Figure 3.15. Household owns livestock 54
Figure 3.16. Total value of livestock 55
Figure 3.17. Value per tropical livestock unit 55
Figure 3.18. Household has non-farm business 55
Figure 3.19. Value of productive assets among households with non-farm business 55
Figure 3.20. Household primary income source 56
Figure 3.21. Household primary income source 58
Figure 3.22. Work status by gender 59
Figure 3.23. Work type by gender 59
Figure 3.24. Occupation 59
Figure 3.25. Occupation among completed secondary or more 60
Figure 3.26. Refugee Occupation Concentration 61
Figure 3.27. Youth work status 62
Figure 3.28. Male youth work status 63
Figure 3.29. Female youth work status 63
Figure 4.1. Desired location in three years 64
Figure 4.2. Expected location in three years 64
Figure 4.3. Locus of control 66
Figure 4.4. Locus of control by type of control 66
Figure 5.1. Poverty incidence 68
Figure 5.2. Income inequality, Gini index 68
Figure 5.3. Expenditure components (in birr) 69
Figure 5.4. Shares of food expenditure 69
Figure 5.5. Food and non-food expenditures shares by sources 70
Figure 5.6. Food expenditure shares by food groups 71
Figure 5.7. Multidimensional poverty incidence, severity, and vulnerability 72
Figure 5.8. Perceived changes in household living standards 73
Figure 5.9. Food insecurity scale for refugees and host 74
Figure 5.10. Dietary diversity and food consumption status 74
Figure 5.11. Type of shocks experienced 75
Figure 5.12. Shock coping strategies 75
Figure 5.13. Household composition by quintiles 76
Figure 5.14. Demographic characteristics by quintile 76
Figure 5.15. Poverty headcount rate for in-camp refugees and their hosts, by domain 77
Figure 5.16. Poverty incidence decreases with education of the household head 77
Figure 5.17. Household wealth indicators by expenditure quintiles 78
Figure 5.18. Labor market outcomes by expenditure quintiles 79
Figure 5.19. Poverty rates and employment for refugees and host 80
Figure 5.20. Share of consumption provided in-kind or for free by consumption per capita quintiles among in-camp refugees 81
Figure 5.21. Poverty incidence at consumption and pre-assistance consumption levels 81
Figure 5.22. Costs of basic needs per refugee per year under different scenarios 83
Figure 6.1. Refugee incidence 86
Figure 6.2. Labor force participation rate by proximity to resource hub, market accessibility 87
Figure 6.3. Refugees' labor market outcomes 87
Figure 6.4. Sectoral employment 88
Figure 6.5. The share of refugee youth who are NEET 88
Figure 6.6. Local labor supply effect of refugee's odds of employment 90
Figure 6.7. Local unemployment level matters to obtain jobs 90
Figure 6.8. Distance to the nearest city and the chance of obtaining a job for refugees 90
Figure 6.9. Employment and proximity to resource hubs 90
Figure 7.1. Host response to "Refugees are good people" 93
Figure 7.2. Host response to "Would you feel comfortable having a refugee as a neighbor?" 93
Figure 7.3. Host response to "Refugees are good people" by gender 94
Figure 7.4. Host response to "Would you feel comfortable having a refugee as a neighbor?" by gender 94
Figure 7.5. Share of hosts who agree refugees 94
Figure 7.6. Host beliefs about refugee 94
Figure 7.7. Negative experiences due to refugees 96
Figure 7.8. Positive experience due to refugees 96
Figure 7.9. Are most Ethiopians/refugees in Ethiopia trustworthy? 96
Figure 7.10. Host Attitudes Index 97
Figure 7.11. Host Attitudes Index by Gender 97
Figure 7.12. Share with family or friends in Ethiopia 98
Figure 7.13. Share with friends in Ethiopia by demographic group 98
Figure 7.14. Share of refugees who think 99
Figure 7.15. Who do refugees rely on in times of need 99
Figure 7.16. Share of refugees who agree they are "culturally similar to hosts" 100
Figure 7.17. Share or refugees involved in a community representative body 101
Figure 7.18. Share or refugees engaged in a community representative body by demographic group 101
Figure 7.19. Discrimination and harassment 101
Figure 7.20. Discrimination and harassment by demographic group 101
Boxes
Box 1.1. Comparison of SPS 2017 and SESRE 2023 25
Box 2.1. Education system for refugees in Ethiopia 31
Box 2.2. Refugees under the Out-of-Camp Policy (OCP) 32
Box 3.1. Eritrean refugee sample in the SESRE 47
Box 3.2. OCP Refugees under the Amnesty Program 48
Box 3.3. Refugee Vocational Training and Cooperatives 57
Box 5.1. Consumption aggregation and poverty measurement 68
Box 5.2. Disparity between refugee ration aid and reported consumption quantities 69
Box 5.3. MPI methodology 72
Box 5.4. Estimation of the cost of basic needs for refugees 81
Box 6.1. Measurement of proximity and market access index in Ethiopia 85
Box 7.1. Socio-political tensions in the Gambella Region 93
Annex Tables
Table B.1. Pledges made at 2016 UN Leaders' Summit and progress 123
Table B.2. GRF pledges and implementation progress 125
Table C.3. The distribution of sampled and surveyed households by domains 130
Table D.4. Demographic characteristics by survey domains 134
Table D.5. Education outcomes by survey domains 134
Table D.6. Health outcomes by survey domains 135
Table D.7. Living conditions by survey domains 136
Table D.8. Labor force statistics by survey domains 144
Table D.9. Determinants of refugee-host earnings gap 144
Table D.10. Determinants of employment outcomes 144
Table D.11. Refugee Household Reliance on NGOs/Donations 145
Table D.12. Determinants of refugee-host earnings gap 145
Table D.13. Refugee intention to migrate abroad 150
Table D.14. Poverty headcount rate by subgroups 151
Table D.15. Determinants of welfare (total expenditure per capita) 151
Table D.16. Determinants of welfare for in-camp refugees 153
Table D.17. Variables used to estimate employment outcomes 155
Table D.18. Factors determining the odds of obtaining a job for refugees: logit model 156
Table D.19. Proximity and market accessibility effects on engagement in agriculture activity: logit model 157
Table D.20. Proximity and market accessibility effects on engagement in service sector: logit model 158
Table D.21. Regression analysis of host and refugee attitudes 159
Table D.22. Regression analysis of social integration outcomes 161
Table D.23. Regression analysis of social integration and labor market outcomes 162
Table E.24. Food aid data/information received from UNHCR 163
Table E.25. Food aid and consumption comparisons 164
Table E.26. Aggregate food expenditures 164
Table E.27. Food aid data/information received from WFP 165
Table E.28. Food quantity and expenditure comparisons 165
Table E.29. Aggregate food expenditures 166
Table F.30/Table F.1. Results on common indicators from SPS 2017 and SESRE 2023 167
Annex Figures
Figure D.1. Age group by gender 136
Figure D.2. Refugees' education document 137
Figure D.3. Share of school-age children in education per household 137
Figure D.4. School-age children currently attending school by gender 138
Figure D.5. Reasons for not currently attending school by gender 138
Figure D.6. Average annual household education expenditure (in ETB) 139
Figure D.7. Type of health institutions 139
Figure D.8. Problems faced in health institutions 140
Figure D.9. Stunting by gender of children 140
Figure D.10. Childbirth in health institutions (children under five years) 141
Figure D.11. No birth evidence available (children under five years) 141
Figure D.12. Average annual per capita health expenditure 142
Figure D.13. Types of disability 142
Figure D.14. Rent expenditure (Refugees and hosts in Addis Ababa) 143
Figure D.15. Hand washing facility 143
Figure D.16. Top 3 difficulties with being a refugee by survey domains 146
Figure D.17. Work status by survey domains 147
Figure D.18. Type of work by survey domains 147
Figure D.19. Occupation by survey domains 147
Figure D.20. Work location by survey domains 148
Figure D.21. Hours per week by survey domains 148
Figure D.22. Hourly earnings by survey domains 148
Figure D.23. Household owns crops 148
Figure D.24. Household owns livestock 148
Figure D.25. Total value of livestock 149
Figure D.26. Value per tropical livestock unit 149
Figure D.27. Household has non-farm business 149
Figure D.28. Value of productive assets in households with business 149
Figure D.29. Primary source of income pre-post migration by survey domains 149
Figure D.30. Youth work status by survey domains 150
Figure D.31. In-camp refugee locations by ecological Zone 154
Figure D.32. Refugee's labor market performance 154
Figure D.33. Economic secto 155
Annex Boxes
Box B.0.1. Employment pathways of refugees 122
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