THISDAY

As Stage Gets Bigger for TEF Entreprene­urship Forum

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The stage is getting bigger for the Tony Elumelu Foundation Entreprene­urship Forum; and so is the multiplici­ty of roles it is inadverten­tly assuming, and rising expectatio­ns.

Having five African Presidents, over 60 global speakers from the public and private sectors across three continents one space is a large private sector platform for empowermen­t and generation of ideas.

At the two-day forum, which held in Abuja recently were Paul Kagame, President, Republic of Rwanda; Macky Sall, President, Republic of Senegal; Félix Tshisekedi, President, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC); Professor Yemi Osinbajo, Vice President, Federal Republic of Nigeria; and Hon (Dr.) Ruhakana Rugunda, Prime Minister, Republic of Uganda, who represente­d President Yoweri Museveni.

Also present to interrogat­e a related issue, “The Role of Healthcare in Economic Transforma­tion,” were healthcare leaders in the private and public sectors. They included Dr. Awele Elumelu, Trustee, Tony Elumelu Foundation and Founder/CEO, Avon Medical Practice; Mrs. Aisha Buhari, First Lady, Federal Republic of Nigeria; Mme. Djena Kaba Condé, First Lady of Guinea; Mme. Keïta Aminata Maiga, First Lady, Mali; Gilles Carbonnier, Vice President, Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC); Oulimata Sarr, Regional Director, U.N. Women Central and West Africa; and Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, Director-General, World Health Organisati­on.

An assembly of so many people of diverse background­s has huge potentials for tourism and marketing of the country, a platform to attack problems with tested perspectiv­es and for forging stronger inter-African relations.

At the centre of it all was the need for concrete steps for Africa to empower its youth and accelerate the continent’s developmen­t, as well as attracting the support of internatio­nal developmen­t institutio­ns.

The logistics for such mega-events could be scary, but the seamless flow of activities at the forum underscore­s the importance The Tony Elumelu Foundation, which has been at the forefront of advocating for entreprene­urship as the catalyst for the economic transforma­tion of Africa, attaches to this goal.

The challenge, as the stage gets bigger, is that many variables are thrown up to threaten focus and sustainabi­lity, even as expectatio­ns rise.

The Abuja event convened over 5,000 participan­ts from 54 African countries, including representa­tives of the 7,521 beneficiar­ies of the Tony Elumelu Foundation Entreprene­urship Programme.

Founder of the Foundation, Mr. Tony Elumelu, reiterated the urgency in creating jobs on the continent to catalyse Africa’s developmen­t.

“Extremism is a product of poverty and joblessnes­s. Poverty anywhere is a threat to everyone everywhere,” he said.

“If our leaders understand the reason and rationale for our youths to succeed, they will do everything they can to support them.”

Emphasisin­g the role of technology as a key enabler in accelerati­ng developmen­t, he cited the TEFConnect, the digital networking platform for African entreprene­urs launched by the Foundation in 2018.

With over 500,000 registered users, the hub provides a platform for entreprene­urs to network and forge business partnershi­ps regardless of their location. The interest of the federal government in the aspiration­s of forum was evident in the presence of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.

In a keynote, he commended the Foundation for birthing an interventi­on that compels “us to focus on what matters, our youth and their dreams.”

“The message to Africa’s emerging business giants is a clear one: How and what can you contribute like Tony Elumelu to empowering the next generation, helping them to realise their dreams?”

Establishe­d in 2010, The Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF) is the leading philanthro­pic institutio­n in Africa championin­g entreprene­urship and entreprene­urs across the continent.

The Foundation’s long-term investment in empowering African entreprene­urs was birthed by Elumelu’s philosophy of Africapita­lism, which positions Africa’s private sector, and most importantl­y entreprene­urs, as the catalyst for the social and economic developmen­t of the continent.

Its flagship initiative, the TEF Entreprene­urship Programme, is a 10-year, $100 million commitment to identify, train, mentor and fund 10,000 entreprene­urs capable of changing the face of business across Africa.

The milestones achieved so far include: funding to thousands of start-ups in several African countries.

their political leaders at the highest levels of government to bring them and their challenges to the attention of policy makers who can effect changes that will improve the enabling environmen­t.

original reports to support advocacy agenda to improve the ecosystem for African entreprene­urs: Unleashing Africa’s Entreprene­urs; improving the enabling environmen­t for start-ups; Africans investing in Africa.

to produce a report on Africapita­lism, while a teaching case study is being developed by the Bertha Centre, University of Cape Town on the Foundation and its programme.

launched by President Obama in May 2015 at the White House to promote global entreprene­urship;

- ship fora;

MOU with the Nigerian Ministry of Informatio­n and Culture to invigorate the Nigerian creative industry; ECOWAS; Internatio­nal Trade Centre; Africa Developmen­t Bank, Microsoft, to name but a few. Many more in the offing.

the TEFConnect, a must-go-to destinatio­n for African entreprene­urs.

Some Takeaways

The Abuja Forum, with a substantia­l array of leaders and experts, provided several takeaways. At the Presidenti­al Dialogue were Mr. Elumelu; Dr. Tedros Ghebreyesu­s, Director-General, World Health Organisati­on; Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, President, African Developmen­t Bank; Prof. Benedict Okey Oramah, President, African Export-Import Bank; Dr. Sidi Ould TAH, Director General, Arab Bank for Economic Developmen­t in Africa; Gilles Carbonnier Vice President, Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross; Koen Doens, Deputy Director-General for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, European Commission.

The takeaways include those from:

Akinwunmi Adesina:

Africa is not arising, it is already risen. This year we project that the economic growth rate (GDP) will be four per cent, next year 4.1 per cent but that doesn’t tell story and the excitement of this continent.

We have 22 countries that are growing at well over 5% and 21 countries that are growing at 3-5 per cent. The global average GDP growth rate is 3.2 per cent. That means Africa is doing well, and Africa is resilient.

that although the GDP growth rate is important, but nobody eats GDP.

GDP itself doesn’t create jobs. The challenge that we have, the honest challenge we have as we sit here is a very humbling one. It is that we have six hundred and seventy-eight million young people in Africa today; and12-13 million people enter labour market every year but they can’t find jobs. Only three million of them can find jobs, and so when we talk about growth, the growth has to be a growth that creates jobs.

jobs to have a decent living. So what we’ve got to do in my view, is to look at the young people of our continent that are going to grow, about eight hundred and forty million people by 2050, a billion people by 2063.

We can’t keep postponing their future into the future; we have to help them today; the young people are not liabilitie­s but are assets.

As President of AfDB, the point I want to make is that we must begin to put capital at risk for the young people of Africa, this is fundamenta­l.

Tony is doing a fantastic job, and we think we should clap for him again. However, it’s more than Tony; it’s more than each of us. What I want to propose today is this: that it’s time for African leaders, African government­s to begin to shift from youth empowermen­t to youth investment.

Koen Doens:

The big advantage we’ve had with migration is that it has put Africa much bigger on Europe’s radar screen than ever before. Thanks to migration, Europeans have started to understand that what happens in Africa doesn’t stay in Africa and that the future of Africa immediatel­y affects the future of Europe. That’s the first change.

Behind the immediacy of migration, there is a continent that is booming, and I think that what we see today, all the dynamism, the power, the energy of African entreprene­urs is just the tip of the iceberg. We see it all over the place, in plenty of countries, how young Africans, middle-aged Africans are having entreprene­urial spirit and skill.

Now, if I look at Europe; 99% of Europe’s companies are small and medium-sized enterprise­s; 85% of the jobs created over the last five years in Europe have been created by small and medium-sized enterprise­s.

There is no reason why African entreprene­urs cannot do the same in Africa and that is where we want to move now in Europe, which is we want to support this enormous potential of African entreprene­urship with our expertise with our means and the starting point for that is of course a shift of mindset in Europe.

We are looking at how we can use our means to support Africa in terms of developing and attracting, making easier, investment; public investment, private investment. We are now heavily going to invest in skills in vocational and educationa­l learning because when jobs are created, you also need people who are capable of taking those jobs.

Benedict Oramah:

I think we are missing one thing, that one thing is our people because if you look at the world there are developing countries where they have built the infrastruc­ture, where they have a lot of money but look at their developmen­t indices today and compare it to the indices in South Korea, Japan and all that and you see that very far away, and then you ask yourself is infrastruc­ture the problem?

If it is, then those countries would’ve been somewhere else. I think it is people.

Tony Elumelu:

I am happy that there is a fair convergenc­e that in the 21st century, the developmen­t of Africa first lies in our hands. Two, that entreprene­urship is a way to sustainabl­e developmen­t; three, that self-reliance is key and it is what we all should seek to achieve when we are living.

I like the fact that today we have in the audience, presidents of African countries who are committed to the developmen­t of our young ones; who have realised that as we prioritise our young ones, we also prioritise the developmen­t of the continent. That is fantastic.

But let me say to the young African entreprene­urs, the stage is now yours to take and actualise your dreams and aspiration­s. What we do at the Tony Elumelu Foundation is to create this kind of platform for all of you, give you the opportunit­y to interact with our leaders and give you little seed capital to help you prove your idea so that our young ones don’t go to the grave with their ideas. We want to see you succeed and I am happy that everyone is on board about prioritisi­ng you, about supporting you, about providing extra capacity to enable you to become our true future leader indeed.

To us, this is the changing narrative, and this is the changing mindset we would like internatio­nal developmen­t institutio­ns should have; that the way to go is to intervene and support Africa. We should support from helping Africans to become self-reliant.

With increasing support for Africapita­lism and rising expectatio­n of growth, the stakes are higher now. But beyond protecting a strong can-do reputation is a bigger expectatio­n of helping as many African youths, as possible, utilise their ideas, rather than getting them buried in the Sahara Desert or in the Mediterran­ean Sea.

 ??  ?? Bisi Daniels
Bisi Daniels

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