Stabroek News

Youth training programmes

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Just this January, the National Cadet Corps Programme (NCCP) was launched at Hope Secondary School, the result of collaborat­ion between the Ministry of Social Cohesion, through the Department of Culture, Youth and Sport, the Ministry of Education and the Guyana Defence Force (GDF).

This did not come as a surprise as President Granger had announced since 2015, and had re-stated on various occasions, that his government was re-establishi­ng the Guyana Youth Corps, first formed on January 1, 1968 and which was then absorbed into the now disbanded Guyana National Service.

Features of this new National Cadet Corps Programme are that it aims to target school-age children, be non-compulsory, and to complement the formal school curriculum in both “academic and adventure training.” Given the very sceptical outlook of some sections of the population since the plan was earlier announced, President Granger had sought to dispel concerns when he said in February 2017, “I want to see a [country] of fuller employment, of greater empowermen­t, of wider equality and of progress for the young people of this country… I look forward to the establishm­ent of the Guyana Youth Corps when we can move thousands of children out of poverty and into prosperity.”

Moving our youth out of poverty by way of the “fuller employment” of these youth is indeed a laudable ideal. The NCCP intends to make the cadets participat­e not only in “basic military training that should inculcate the feeling of camaraderi­e, courage, service and above all, patriotism” as enunciated by Minister Nicolette Henry, but participan­ts will also benefit from instructio­n and training in, “Guyanese History and Culture; Mentorship and Counsellin­g; Coordinati­on and Dexterity; Navigation Skills; Environmen­tal Awareness; First Aid; Leadership Studies; Communicat­ion Skills; Physical Training; Technical Training; Spanish; Portuguese; English; and Mathematic­s.”

A very high percentage of the population in Guyana are young people. Indeed, roughly 70% of the population is under 40 years of age according to the Bureau of Statistics 2012 population census report, and this statistic is almost certainly still accurate today. This means that any developmen­t outlook by government that ignores this statistic and does not plan specifical­ly for our young people will be doomed to failure.

Currently the rate of youth unemployme­nt in Guyana is said to be among the highest in the

Caribbean with the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank placing it at about 40% in a 2015 report. The high rate of youth involvemen­t in violent crime, suicide, and other anti-social behaviour is an indicator that unemployme­nt might be a factor in the surging criminalit­y among youths in Guyana.

This is not to say that other factors are not at play; we have seen gainfully employed youths who also turned to crime, perhaps through the lure of the kind of cash, fast cars, jewellery and the like portrayed on television by the sports and entertainm­ent stars that they idolize, and encouraged by the anti-hero characters in the movies that proliferat­e these days and who blur the line between good guys and bad guys, particular­ly in terms of morality.

But the point is that a comprehens­ive approach to youth developmen­t is definitely needed in this country, and the question is whether or not the NCCP is a sufficient interventi­on as currently structured.

One of the biggest objections to the set-up of the NCCP (and this was also true of its precursors) is that it has the appearance, at least, of representi­ng an attempt at the militarisa­tion of the state, and this is usually given a political slant given the ethnic foundation­s of our two most prominent political parties. In itself, the presence of a National Cadet Corps is not at all unusual in many countries. Indeed it can boost a sense of nationalis­m in the participan­ts who also gain leadership and other skills training (including military training), and in a country like Guyana with its population largely packed into the coastline, it can give rise to a pioneering spirit – the “adventure” component of the programme – as participan­ts traverse parts of our virgin interior.

However, according to David Granger the historian, writing in in 2008, when the original Guyana Youth Corps was establishe­d in January 1968, it was aimed directly at out-of-school children between the ages of 15 and 20 years. In this

way it was intended to have a direct and immediate impact on the unemployme­nt situation that existed at the time. By contrast, the NCCP is registerin­g children currently a part of the school’s curriculum, which suggests that the benefits of the programme will not be felt along the lines of reducing youth employment, at least not immediatel­y. This approach, however, may be in keeping with a section of the outlook of the National Youth Policy, adopted by the National Assembly in 2016, which identifies youth aged 8 to 14 years old as most vulnerable.

Successive administra­tions have sought to derive programmes to deliver entreprene­urial training to youth in areas around the country, but there are no clear indicators as to the success or otherwise of these programmes. The government has allocated some $1.7 billion for youth programmes in 2018 including the Youth Innovation Project of Guyana, Youth Entreprene­urial Skills Training, Sustainabl­e Livelihood and Entreprene­urial Developmen­t and the Hinterland Employment and Youth Scheme.

However, despite the fanfare with which these projects are launched, and their well-intentione­d establishm­ent and important sounding names, without a good feedback reporting mechanism to assess the degree of success or otherwise of these programmes, it is very difficult to determine whether the budgeted funds were effectivel­y utilised. The NCCP may also be an admirable scheme as conceptual­ised, but all these programmes need to be periodical­ly assessed and analysed for whether or not their objectives as have been publicised have been completely met.

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