40% Of Nigerian Youths Jobless; Restless Angry — Adesina

40% Of Nigerian Youths Jobless; Restless Angry — Adesina
Dr. Akinwumi Adesina
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The President of African Development Bank, AfDB, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, has decried the high rate of joblessness among Nigerians at the moment, asserting that about 40 per cent of youths were unemployed.

Adesina, who made this disclosure on Monday at a lecture in Lagos, pointed out that the youths were discouraged, angry and restless, as they look at a future that does not give them hope.

In the lecture, titled, ‘Nigeria – A Country of Many Nations: A Quest for National Integration‘, Dr. Adesina , however, said all hope was not lost as youths have a vital role to play, if the country should arrive at its destined destination.

Africa Daily News, New York reports that according to the latest Labour Force report of the National Bureau of Statistics, unemployment among young Nigerians (15- 34 years) is the highest in the country, with 21.72 million or 42.5 per cent of the 29.94 young Nigerians in the labour force unemployed, while the national unemployment rate stood at 33.3 per cent as at December 2020.

Read Also: AfDB Will Create 25 Million New Jobs By 2025 – Adesina

According to Adesina; ‘For the period under review, Q4, 2020, the unemployment rate among young people (15- 34years) was 42.5%, up from 34.9%, while the rate of underemployment for the same age group declined to 21.0% from 28.2% in Q2, 2020.

These rates were the highest when compared to other age groupings’, the NBS said in its ‘Labour Force Statistics, Unemployment And Under Employment – Q4 2020’.

Speaking further, Adesina said: ‘For Nigeria to be all that it can be, the youth of Nigeria must be all they can be.

‘The future of Nigeria depends on what it does today with its dynamic youth population. This demographic advantage must be turned into a first-rate and well-trained workforce, for Nigeria, for the region, and for the world.

We should prioritise investments in the youth: in up skilling them for the jobs of the future, not the jobs of the past; by moving away from so-called youth empowerment to youth investment; to opening up the social and political space to the youth to air their views and become a positive force for national development; and for ensuring that we create youth-based wealth.

‘From the East to the West, from the North to the South, there must be a change in economic, financial, and business opportunities for young Nigerians.

‘The old must give way to the young. And there must be a corresponding generational transfer of power and wealth to the youth. The popular folk talk should no longer be ‘the young shall grow,’ it should, rather, be: “the young have arrived.

‘The young shoots are springing up in Nigeria. Today, Nigeria’s youth are leading in the FinTech Industry. two companies – PayPal Interswitch are both valued at $1 billion.

‘A third company, Flutterwave, more than tripled its valuation in less than a year to over $3 billion. What does this tell us? The future is here and young entrepreneurs are central to it.

‘The African Development Bank approved $170 million in December of last year for Nigeria to support its programme to expand digital and creative industries, by unleashing the incredible entrepreneurship of Nigeria’s youth.

‘The African Development Bank is also exploring the establishment of Youth Entrepreneurship Investment Banks — financial institutions for young people, run by first-rate young bankers and financial experts, to drive youth-wealth creation.

‘Nigerians deserve wealth, not poverty.  There cannot and should not be a Nigeria for the rich, and another Nigeria for the poor.

‘We must build one Nigeria, where every citizen has the right to a decent life. We must build a better nation.  We must start building again, not splintering again.

‘We must re-build trust, equity, and social justice, to propel strong cohesiveness as a nation.  The tides are high, I know, and our boat rocks from time to time. Yet, I have hope, hope for a better Nigeria … a renewed nation. Hope for a nation that is helped and healed by God. A nation, where the sacrifices of Nigerians past and present shall not be in vain.

‘I pray and long for a better Nigeria.   For a nation, built not on the division of its past, or the foundations of ethnicity, but on a new foundation, the foundation of equity, fairness, justice, and unity, one Nigerian to the other.

‘For a new Nigeria, where one from the North shall be at home in the East; where one from the East shall break bread with one in the North; one where the one in the West shall eat from the same plate with one in the North; and wash hands in the same basin as one in the East.’

He submitted that for Nigeria to realise its dream, The constituent states in Nigeria must be more financially autonomous through greater fiscal prudence.              

AFRICA DAILY NEWS, NEW YORK

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