Akinwunmi Adeshina, president of the African Development Bank (AfDB) has described empowerment initiatives by Nigerian leaders as ‘freebies’ that may not help propel prosperity and unlock opportunities for teeming Nigerian youths.

Adeshina, speaking on Channels TV on Thursday called on government leaders to focus on capital-focused empowerment to reduce the “Japa Syndrome” that’s causing the country “big loss” and brain-drain.

“Young people don’t need freebies; they have skills, knowledge, and entrepreneurship capacity. They want to turn their ideas into great businesses,” Adeshina said.

“And so what the young people need, it’s not those so-called empowerment programs; they need capital. They need you to put your money at risk on their behalf,” he added.

“We have to put our money behind our young people and create opportunities for them. They don’t need N5,000, N10,000.”

Read also: AfDB, others vote $510 million for implementation of first phase of SAPZs in Nigeria

Nigeria’s youthful population estimated at 160 million or 70 percent of total population are bedeviled by various setbacks such as unemployment, poverty and lack of access to capital.

Adeshina noted that these youths are the “biggest assets” that the nation has and must be prioritized in order to turn them into “economic assets”. But the failure has resulted in many of the young people throng out of the country in search for greener pastures.

The AfDB chief lamented that the financial and commercial banking system has failed young people in Africa who are supposed to serve as demographic assets.

“At the African Development Bank, I led my team to develop what’s called the Youth Entrepreneurship Investment Banks. These are new financial institutions across Africa that do nothing but just support the businesses of young people.

“And they are not cash, they are not deposit-taking banks, they’re investment banks that will allow them to have business support facilities. They will be able to develop their business plans. They will have technical assistance, they will have debt and equity as their businesses grow,” Adeshina said.

Adeshina revealed that the AfDB just approved $100 million to set up the Nigerian Youth Entrepreneurship Investment Bank which will mobilize $2 billion of investment for more than 38,000 businesses of young people in Africa.

He also stated that the Bank together with Unislami Development Bank and others, have a $614 million program called IDICE, an initiative for the development of support for creative enterprises and digital enterprises in Nigeria.

Read also: Full speech of Akinwumi A. Adesina as he receives Kenya’s highest national honour

According to him, this initiative will support almost 300 small businesses of young people in digital and creative enterprises, and probably create about 6 million jobs, and add about $6.4 billion to Nigeria’s economy.

“It’s not just about looking for jobs. Most people want to start their own businesses. Africa has the highest level of entrepreneurship in the world, but they deserve and they need capital to turn those ideas into real viable and competitive businesses,” he said.

Wasiu Alli is a business, economics cum data journalist with strong expertise covering macro trends, capital markets, government policies, corporate earnings and comparative economics analysis. Alli turns raw data into trends that not only tells compelling stories but nudges investors to make valued and informed decisions. He’s an alumnus of Lagos State University and trained at Lagos Business School. He formerly heads the Companies and Markets desk at BusinessDay where he writes and supervises the production of well researched articles on earnings updates, corporate sectoral comparisons, market intelligence as well as interviews with C-suite executives.

Join BusinessDay whatsapp Channel, to stay up to date

Open In Whatsapp