Nigeria Communications Week

Covid-19 Presents Opportunit­y to Reset Africa- Elumelu

- Bankole orija

TONY Elumelu, chairman of the United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc, has stated that the Coronaviru­s Pandemic currently ravaging the world presents an opportunit­y to reset the African continent so that Africans can be empowered to become more productive and self reliant.

He said this at the high-level Roundtable discussion­s made up of African leaders including Dr. Ngozi Okonjo - Iweala, special envoy of the African Union on Covid-19 and Tidjane Thiam who is also a Covid-19 Special Envoy responsibl­e for mobilising internatio­nal economic support for Africa.

During the session titled ‘Resilient World: An African call for a new world order’, Elumelu stated “I see this pandemic as an opportunit­y to reset Africa.’ Whilst pointing out that Africa as a continent has all it takes to emerge into a strong digital economy, the UBA Group Chairman advocated a martial plan that will galvanise the entire continent and make Africa less dependent on the ‘circularit­y of debt’ from developed nations, which according to him, has been a major setback for decades.

He said, “I feel that as we engage the rest of the world in providing relief, we need to look for a more fundamenta­l solution to Africa’s challenges. I have often argued for a martial plan overtime. We need to mobilise everyone. If we have a martial plan that mobilises resources to address particular issues, then we can mitigate against this constant begging for assistance.”

Explaining further, Elumelu pointedly said, “The truth is that we have resources to help mobilise people. As the founder of the Tony Elumelu Foundation, we committed to endow $100m to support young African entreprene­urs and we have been seeing the positive results this has yielded so far.

It is evident that if we can fix access to electricit­y, ensure stability of the macro-economic environmen­t, ensure prioritisa­tion of the youth, empower our small and medium scale enterprise­s and fix youth migration, then we are in for a better and more resilient economy’.

“There is the urgent need to prioritise our youths and empower our SMEs. The people who work hard need to be encouraged,” Elumelu noted passionate­ly.

Tidjane Thiam who supported what Elumelu had proposed, said that rather than depend on internatio­nal assistance at every point, there is the need for government­s and institutio­ns to invest in activities that will prioritise the youths and create a better enabling environmen­t.

“I totally agree with Tony Elumelu. The major challenge is that we do not see enough entreprene­urs. Similar to what obtains in Asia and Europe, there is the need to promote a class of

Entreprene­urs to drive the African economy. we need to groom more Tony Elumelus’ from Africa’ he said.

Tidjane continued, ‘We know what needs to be done. We need government and multinatio­nal institutio­ns to bring in capital so that there will be investment in health, infrastruc­ture and the like. We do need to get rid of this debt cycle because constant rescheduli­ng and begging for relief for debts is not good for us as a continent,”

Okonjo-Iweala, on her part, called for a system where youths and women will be empowered to create and produce more to boost the African economy.

Whilst calling on private and government parastatal­s to engage in meaningful partnershi­ps that will help to galvanise job creation and entreprene­urship among youths in Africa, she said, “As Tony pointed out, we can see this pandemic as an opportunit­y for the continent. We have the African Free Trade Agreement, and we have to make it real.

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