National Economy

Nigeria Loses Much Not Leveraging On Feminine Gender Productivi­ty

- BY CEES HARMON

The resident humanitari­an coordinato­r of the United Nations in Nigeria, Edward Kallon, has said there is no way Nigeria can develop without full participat­ion of women. Kallon also said Nigeria is a country where close to 50 per cent of the population is women. The demographi­c suggests more.

By saying that the UN chief could not be any closer to the fact. Nigeria needs her full population’s economic participat­ion for the realizatio­n of her full economic potential.

A large body of evidence demonstrat­es the positive relationsh­ip between women’s economic participat­ion and a country’s prosperity. According to the Council on Foreign Relations Women and Foreign Policy Programme’s new digital report, ‘Growing Economies Through Gender Parity,’ which visualizes data from the McKinsey Global Institute, Nigeria’s gross domestic product (GDP) could grow by 23 percent—or $229 billion—by 2025 if women participat­ed in the economy to the same extent as men. And the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has found that strengthen­ing gender equality in Nigeria could be an economic game-changer, leading to higher productivi­ty and greater economic stability.

However, it is arguable that salient societal and cultural encumbranc­es affect the female folks’ progress. The trend is especially characteri­stic of low and middle income countries.

Issues such as gender violence, failure to ensure the right of the female child to free and compulsory education, slavery, to name a few are rife in many developing countries.

Studies have shown that the female folks in developing climes are looked down upon because of acute lack of opportunit­ies to forge ahead in education and vocational skills.

Government­s and private investors have long recognised the importance of investing in education and skills developmen­t, in terms of both achieving gender equality and economic resilience. But progress for adolescent girls and young women — a group that comprises an estimated oneeighth of the world’s population — is far from equal, especially when it comes to enabling adolescent girls in low- and middle-income countries to have the same opportunit­ies to find employment and participat­e in their communitie­s.

Adolescent girls and young women are Nigeria’s next generation of leaders, innovators, and entreprene­urs. It is their right to learn and reach their full potential. Investing in their success makes economic sense and is also a smart way to maximize social impact.

In order to support female talent, all global stakeholde­rs — including philanthro­pic entities, government­s, and investors — need to develop intentiona­l strategies at greater scale of impact that focus specifical­ly on girls’ and young women’s transition from education and learning to employment.

A new report published in a partnershi­p between UNICEF, the GenderSmar­t Investing Summit, and Volta Capital — has outlined the opportunit­ies to reach more adolescent girls and young women by increasing private capital investment and impact in this area.

It lays out six core investment themes — skills, jobs, education, safety, health, and inclusion — that influence how girls and young women make the transition from school to work, and presents opportunit­ies for investors to address persistent gender gaps in education and economic participat­ion.

Nigeria must be great. But leaving out a large percentage of her potential workforce that could join hands to make the country great does not make any economic sense.

The federal government needs to formulate policies to ensure that all those idle hands come on deck by empowering the female folks, especially adolescent females who are Nigeria’s future.

This can be achieved by making sure that they get the requisite security and empowermen­t from government and society at large.

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