Tony O Elumelu, the UBA chairman
Development partners have been challenged to commit at least 5 per cent of committed funds into empowering entrepreneurship.
Speaking
during the seventh Tokyo International Conference on African
Development, in Yokohama, Japan Mr Tony O Elumelu, the UBA chairman,
investor and philanthropist, said Japan, which had
committed $20b in Kenya in 2018 and another $30b during last week’s conference, should see to it that at least 5 per cent of the $50b goes into boosting entrepreneurship to catalyse growth and create impact development.
committed $20b in Kenya in 2018 and another $30b during last week’s conference, should see to it that at least 5 per cent of the $50b goes into boosting entrepreneurship to catalyse growth and create impact development.
“We
could touch 500,000 lives, across the 54 African countries, broadening
markets, facilitating job creation, improving income per capita, and
laying the key foundation for political and economic stability,” he said
in a statement, noting that if Africa and donors get priorities right
there will be shared prosperity.
Africa, especially
Uganda, still experiences a high entrepreneurship mortality rate with
many start-ups unable to celebrate their third anniversary.
This
has been a hindrance to the urgent need to close the largely growing
employment gap which currently averages above 40 across Africa.
Mr
Elumelu, one of Africa’s social transformers in the last two decades,
said donors need to hinge funding on bold and transformative structure
such as investment in infrastructure, partnership with private sector,
and investment in youth.
The above, especially youth unemployment, which currently
averages at 60 per cent, have been the main trouble areas, which, Mr
Elumelu said must be the main recipients of donor funding, especially
from Japan. Africa, Mr Elumelu said, has a great potential given its
large population which currently stands at 1.3b people.
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