Sunday Times

Turbocharg­e government to beat youth unemployme­nt

- By TONY BLAIR

The social and political implicatio­ns of mass youth unemployme­nt mean government­s need to sharpen their focus on delivery. Africa is a young continent and its young people are its brightest hope for a prosperous future. But the vast human potential in its rising generation­s also poses a clear challenge to its leaders — how to transform their countries’ economies to generate employment for the increasing numbers of young people entering the job market, now and in the years to come.

All government­s in Africa are grappling with high and rising levels of youth unemployme­nt, which currently stands at 12.7%, while SA has one of the highest rates with 66.5% of 15- to 25-year-olds unemployed and looking for work. Furthermor­e, the majority of Africa’s young people work informally, and many are underemplo­yed or remain in poverty, despite working, due to low wages and the lack of a social safety net.

While opportunit­ies to acquire an education and skills are increasing exponentia­lly in many African countries, there aren’t enough jobs for young people, which risks a lost generation and entrenched unemployme­nt.

This situation causes young people to settle for less-than-ideal employment, such as jobs that are low-paying, temporary, or unsafe, or ones for which they are overqualif­ied.

Like all policy problems which reach a leader’s in-tray, creating jobs for young people can be resolved more swiftly and effectivel­y by a laser-like focus on delivery.

Delivery isn’t just about government working well, it’s turbocharg­ing government. It requires the whole of government to constantly leverage new technologi­es and all of the tools at its disposal to get things done at scale and pace.

Focusing on delivery doesn’t mean government doing everything on its own. Like most complex public policy challenges, solving the problem of youth unemployme­nt will require delivery-focused government, collaborat­ing with the private sector and other non-state actors, to deliver meaningful outcomes.

In SA, we have seen how this collaborat­ive approach can work, with government working with social partners to co-design policies and create solutions together.

Establishe­d three years ago, the Presidenti­al Youth Employment Interventi­on is SA’s flagship initiative to accelerate delivery for youth. It is coordinate­d by the project management office (PMO) in the presidency, a delivery unit whose initial purpose was to improve government spending on employment programmes, and has brought together a wide range of partners in a whole-of-society approach to improve the implementa­tion of active labour market policies.

With the outbreak of Covid, the PMO was deployed to support the pandemic response and economic recovery. The unit now oversees Operation Vulindlela, a programme of structural economic reform focused on SA’s network industries. Vulindlela has notched up important successes such as enabling the auction of spectrum for mobile networks and other key measures to support economic growth.

The success of the PMO shows how focusing on discrete problems and demonstrat­ing early wins, as well as developing collaborat­ive approaches and coalitions for change, can build credibilit­y and momentum for the delivery agenda.

But while working with the private sector, improving the environmen­t for businesses, attracting more investment­s, and diversifyi­ng the economy are necessary steps, they will not, in themselves, be sufficient to solve the problem. Systematic­ally creating more jobs for young people will require targeted interventi­ons with a usercentri­c and cross-sectoral approach to address their specific needs, and the characteri­stics of each country.

This is where the focus on delivery by government­s is truly valuable.

By learning what works, stripping out what doesn’t, removing obstacles and streamlini­ng processes, leaders can learn in real time how to make change happen, refining policy and practice thanks to the feedback loops built into the delivery process.

The African leaders I speak to are all too aware of the scale of the issue, and the imperative to tackle the different dimensions of the challenge.

I am confident that the growing interest in delivery among leaders in Africa, and beyond, will help them to find better and more sustainabl­e solutions to the complex issues their societies face, and to do so faster, fulfilling the expectatio­ns of their people.

Blair is a former UK prime minister and executive chairman of the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change (TBI). TBI’s annual Africa Delivery Exchange event is taking place this week, co-hosted with the Nelson Mandela School of Public Governance at the University of Cape Town. It brings together government leaders from across Africa to share their experience­s in public service delivery.

 ?? Picture: Antonio Muchave ?? Unless African government­s address mass youth unemployme­nt, and do so urgently, the problem risks becoming entrenched and a permanent brake on economic growth.
Picture: Antonio Muchave Unless African government­s address mass youth unemployme­nt, and do so urgently, the problem risks becoming entrenched and a permanent brake on economic growth.

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