By Tabora Bojang

 The executive director of the Global Youth Innovation Network (GYIN) Gambia chapter, Mamadou Edrisa Njie, has said that considering the depressed state of the formal job market in Africa, it is a good thing that more and more youth in Sub-Saharan Africa are looking to entrepreneurship to secure their future.
Njie was speaking during the recent forum for the exchange of ideas for development (FOREID) public symposium in Kanifing.

Njie, who is so passionate about youth development mostly in the areas of strategy, leadership and mentorship training, said young people on the continent are more upbeat about their ability to become entrepreneurs than their peers in any other region, quoting a recent global study.

He noted that the growing youthful population of the country raises many questions amongst which are employment and assuring a decent standard of living to all.

 “This is indeed a major challenge in light of the results of the 2010 Integrated Household Survey (IHS), which shows that 48.4 per cent of the population lives below the poverty line of US$ 1.25 per day.

“Despite substantial improvements in access to basic education and steady economic growth, The Gambia still faces considerable challenges in respect to reducing poverty. 

Nearly 60 percent of the poor in The Gambia are under the age of 20 years. Youth face significant challenges with respect to employment outcomes, such as a very difficult training,” he stated.

 Culled from The Standard Newspaper

https://standard.gm/future-youth-lies-entrepreneurship

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