1. Home
  2. Skills for Prosperity South Africa
UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

Skills for Prosperity South Africa

Last updated: 04/10/2022
IATI Identifier: GB-GOV-1-301316

Description

The Skills for Prosperity Programme is a UK Prosperity Fund programme developed in partnership with nine middle-income countries globally. In South Africa, the programme aims to contribute towards South Africa’s own government priorities to address skills gaps, skills mismatch, and quality training that is hampering national economic growth. Three strands focus on improving the quality of TVET qualifications and institutions, improving access to technical and vocational education for unemployed youth and embedding knowledge sharing and capacity building in order to ensure programme sustainability


Location

The country, countries or regions that benefit from this Programme.
South Africa
Disclaimer: Country borders do not necessarily reflect the UK Government's official position.

Status Completion

The current stage of the Programme, consistent with the International Aid Transparency Initiative's (IATI) classifications.

Programme Spend

Programme budget and spend to date, as per the amounts loaded in financial system(s), and for which procurement has been finalised.

Participating Organisation(s)

Help with participating organisations

Accountable:Organisation responsible for oversight of the activity

Extending: Organisation that manages the budget on behalf of the funding organisation.

Funding: Organisation which provides funds.

Implementing: Organisations implementing the activity.

Sectors

Sector groups as a percentage of total Programme budget according to the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) classifications.

Budget

A comparison across financial years of forecast budget and spend to date on the Programme.

Policy Marker(s)

ODA measures in relation to their realisation of OECD development policy objectives

Gender Equality significant objective

Download IATI Data for GB-GOV-1-301316

Programme data last updated on 04/10/2022