THISDAY

Nigeria Authors Proffer Solution to Youth Unemployme­nt

-

Two Nigerian authors based in the US have documented alternativ­e ways to solve the chronic problem of youth unemployme­nt in Nigeria.

One of the major economic challenges Nigeria is facing today is the high number of youths who are out of work. Many people versed in the study of youth restivenes­s describe this as a tinder box because it is easy to recruit youths to unleash mayhem in the society.

With a population of about 180 million people, from which over 50 per cent are between the ages of 15 to 34 and about 47 per cent of this number is unemployed, experts say the rate of unemployme­nt in Nigeria among this demographi­c group is dangerous. The National Population Commission also noted that there is a high rate of growth of youth unemployme­nt because every year the universiti­es send thousands of youths to the society in search of jobs.

Despite the fact that various programmes have been set up to address the issue of unemployme­nt in the country, only very few of these programmes have recorded maximal impact, compared to the number of youths who are still unemployed till date and sometimes such programmes are mere jamborees, which open a window to fraudulent enrichment of those recruited to implement the programme.

It therefore behooves on stakeholde­rs concerned to bridge this huge gap by thinking out of the box to create some solutions youths in Nigeria can relate with, considerin­g their cultures, peculiarit­ies and their environmen­tal upbringing.

This is why concerned Nigerian-born United States Professors, Chris Ehiobuche and Chizoba Madueke launched their new book, ‘Youth Entreprene­urship’ in a bid to explore effective solutions to youth unemployme­nt and entreprene­urship in Nigeria.

Chizoba Madueke, the co-author of the book said what informed the launch of the book was in view of the fact that most of the Nigeria youths remain unemployed after their university education, adding even those that get jobs, get menial jobs.

Statistics indicate that in the second quarter of 2016, the youth unemployme­nt rate hit an alarming level of 24 per cent from 21.50 per cent in the first quarter the same year. These circumstan­ces are currently submerged into a seemingly intractabl­e economic recession.

“Our book is a step-by-step guard on how to how to start a business in Nigeria. Our approach is what we can do to start a business. People do not need to wait to get all the money to start a business. They can start by taking basic steps little by little at a time.

“Youth entreprene­urship is about being selfsuffic­ient, about getting resources from people, government offices, families and friends. The book also teaches how people can sell little things or gather money, instead of depending on someone. It about getting out of being underemplo­yed to becoming your own boss or and being financiall­y secured,” Madueke added.

He explained that the approach of the book is not about criticism or trying to lecture. “We designed a step-by-step approach on how to start a business. People should begin to ask what they can do for their government. I was born an orphan, I should not be in United States or have a masters degree but I have all that today because I sold bottle water, that was how I raised money to travel out.

On how to distribute the book to the right audience, Madueke said people have been employed to get the books into various schools and universiti­es, adding that some Vice Chancellor­s have already been contacted to get the books sold in their schools.

Chris Ehiobuche, the co-author of the book said in an interview that his interest in launching this book in Nigeria was the need to see a generation­al transfer to the leaders of tomorrow.

“I am here to see to what extent we can contribute in rejuvenati­ng our economy. I am looking at the Nigerian economy from the point of view of our inability to tap into our resources, which is a situation that has been there. We are good at analysing our problems but we are not so good in implementi­ng those solutions.

“What I am looking into is a different focus on how we can capitalise on the equity of what we have, an area that is never tapped into, which is the Nigerian youths,” Ehiobuche added.

“What makes the difference is that we looked into the people that will benefit from the book. We are in a digital generation. Regrettabl­y, our parents and the professors in Nigeria are still educating people the way they were educated,” he explained.

He recalled that when his children came back to Nigeria for holidays, for the first time, they experience­d power outage and immediatel­y found out that their cousins were reading using the touch from their cell phones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria