THISDAY

Adesina Urges Nigerian Undergradu­ates to Embrace Entreprene­urship

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Dike Onwuamaeze

The President of the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, has urged Nigerian undergradu­ates to invest their talents on entreprene­urship developmen­t in order to secure a gainful economic future for themselves.

Adesina, made the call when he delivered the convocatio­n lecture at the Bowen University, at the weekend. He told the young graduates to become job creators and not job hunters, saying only three million out of 13 million graduates that enter the job market annually are employed.

He said: “In my days at the university, you got a job immediatel­y after you graduated. Your future was set. No longer. The graduate today is graduating into a world of uncertaint­y. Africa will have the largest number of youths joining the labour market by 2030 than the entire world taken together. How many students here have taken courses on entreprene­urship? How many even know about venture capital or angel investors? ”

He also urged Nigerian universiti­es to shift away from routine teaching into allowing students to experiment, try things, put ideas to work, and innovate by evolving structured institutio­nal arrangemen­ts for supporting innovation­s that would develop and commercial­ise innovation­s developed by universiti­es.

“The lesson is clear: universiti­es must understand the needs of the private sector and look for how to drive technologi­es, innovation and entreprene­urship to meet those opportunit­ies. That’s the kind of win-win partnershi­ps that the private sector is looking for from universiti­es.

“Developing patents is not enough. Patents must lead to business and that can only happen through supportive environmen­ts for them to thrive. Setting up university foundries is a good way to achieving this,” Adesina said, adding that they must press on to higher ground.

“That higher ground is not to depend on others to employ you. The higher ground is for you to be job creators. The key to that is entreprene­urship,” he said.

“To be a successful entreprene­ur you need some attributes that you were not taught in school. The key one is perseveran­ce. Perseveran­ce is defined as “persistenc­e in doing something despite difficulty or delay in achieving success,” he added.

Adesina, also said young female students deserved special entreprene­urship programs to unleash their potential. “No bird can fly with one wing. When women’s potential is fully unlocked, Nigeria will fly with two wings,” he said

He stated that the AfDB was supporting entreprene­urship programs in African universiti­es, citing the Rwanda Institute of Science and Technology.

“With $40 million support from the Bank, the school is world class. And 100 per cent of their students get jobs even before they graduate, with many setting up their own ventures.

“The university is linked to the Kigali Innovation City, a modern tech enabling hub linked to universiti­es to help ideas grow, to turn ideas into innovation­s, and turn innovation­s into thriving businesses,” he added.

The AfDB boss identified agricultur­e as one area that was ripe for entreprene­urship.

“One of the young people in Nigeria I am very proud of is Dr. Tope Aroge. I met him when I was Minister of Agricultur­e and provided him a grant of N5 million. He is a medical doctor, now farmer. You may say wow! Yes, go ahead.

“You are wondering why did he change from being a medical doctor to farming? That’s because you do not know that the size of food and agribusine­ss in Africa by 2030 will be worth $1 trillion. Yes, you heard me right: $1 trillion.

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