If Africa is to achieve the desired economic growth envisioned by the African Union (AU) Agenda 2063, it will have to provide employment opportunities for its growing young population, which is the largest the world has ever known, comprising about half of Africa’s population of 1.1 billion under the age of 25. This is the view of Cheikh Bedda, the African Union Commission (AUC) Director for Infrastructure and Energy. Bedda was speaking at the opening of the Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA) Week on 11 December 2017 in Swakopmund, Namibia. He said failure to effectively deal with deepening unemployment among Africa’s growing youth population could seriously erode the economic gains achieved across the continent in recent years. “The challenge of creating enough jobs and opportunities for the large African youth population for entering the labour market is one of the major challenges our continent faces,” he noted. He emphasised on the need for PIDA to play an important role in narrowing the gap between job creation and unemployment, with public decision-makers and private sector management actively undertaking training and skills acquisition in infrastructure development. He particularly stressed the need for training in building roads, rail systems, power generation, power transmission systems and information communication technology connectivity to prepare young Africans for the implementation of complex programmes such as PIDA. The African Heads of State and Government adopted PIDA in 2012, as the continental strategic infrastructure framework for the African Union’s stakeholders and partners to address the infrastructure deficit,...
Experts urge infrastructure development to create jobs in Africa
Posted on: December 18, 2017
Posted on: December 18, 2017