News / National
Zim unemployment blamed on poor resource allocation
08 Feb 2012 at 20:25hrs | Views
YOUTH unemployment in Africa is a manifestation of inequitable allocation of resources, President Mugabe has said.
Speaking at celebrations to mark the 20th anniversary of the African Capacity Building Foundation in Harare yesterday, the Head of State and
Government and Commander-in-Chief of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces said Zimbabwe was addressing the challenge through a number of initiatives.
"For Zimbabwe, we are addressing this cha-llenge in a number of ways as will be seen in the make-up of Government where we have ministries dealing with SMEs, Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment, the development of agriculture and the promotion of the use of information technologies."
President Mugabe said Africa was carrying the largest contingent of the global population of young people with 60 percent of its inhabitants below 24years.
"Yet if managed well, this youth represents Africa's best development asset over the next decades," he said.
"For this to happen, it is important to better understand Africa's youth in order to design and implement the best policies aimed at unlocking its creativity and innovativeness."
President Mugabe said Africa was confronted by many challenges on its path to sustained growth and development than ever before.
"There is no denying that Africa needs to substantially improve growth performance if it is to achieve the Millennium Development Goals against the backdrop of the global financial crisis and economic recession in the Euro Zone," he said.
President Mugabe said Africa still needed to position herself in an increasingly globalised world to find solutions to the challenges the continent is facing.
He singled out high food prices, the need for agricultural transformation, unemployment and political instability.
"Central to the myriad of challenges facing our continent is the inadequacy of human and institutional capacity and the absence of a systematic and institutionalised mechanism for peer learning and experience
sharing amongst countries," President Mugabe said.
He said there was an urgent need for a public sector that is knowledgeable, efficient, empowered and committed and a private sector that is innovative, growth-oriented and competitive.
Civil society, he said, should be constructively responsive and capable of collaborating with both the public and private sectors with the view of achieving development goals.
ACBF's commitments to Zimbabwe have amounted to US$18 million in grants.
"These funds have supported the implementation of projects with both national and regional scope," said the President.
"As Government, we welcome ACBF's commitment to work with the Government of Zimbabwe within the framework of its new strategic thinking."
The ACBF has supported Zimbabwe's capacity building project to strengthen the national statistical systems, capacity programme for the Ministry of Regional Integration and International Co-operation and the
public sector management training programme, among others.
ACBF executive secretary Dr Frannie Leatier said her organisation was driving the agenda to end economic dislocations of the 1990s and promote indigenous human capital development.
She said Africa should take charge of its economic development and eradicate poverty.
"We should develop think-tanks and institutionalise dialogue and improve quality of policy, reverse brain drain and pull Africa out of poverty," said Dr Leatier.
ACBF executive board chairperson Mr Paul Baloyi said Africa's economic gains and resources have been eroded in the past 15 years due to broken institutions and conflicts.
He said the global economic crisis impacted negatively on the continent and donor funding had shrunk resulting in economic slowdown.
Mr Baloyi said the leadership in Africa should identify and sustain key elements such as capacity building to capacitate weak elements.
"We are the custodians of our resources and conflicts choke Africa from performing. We need efficiency and good governance," he said.
Finance Minister Tendai Biti, who is an ACBF governor, said Africa was coming from a narrative of pessimism and there was need for continued peace to create a conducive environment for certainty, job creation and food security.
He said the continent required capacity building to attain technical capacity, one of the areas Zimbabwe was still developing.
"We need to rebuild capacity and come up with qualitative elements, which are in line with the social contract. We need to create capacity, retain and utilise it," Minister Biti said.
Month Army Education Rest of Civil Service Pensions
January 12 17 19 20
February 14 21 24 28
March 15 20 26 29
April 12 19 24 27
May 15 22 24 28
June 14 19 25 28
July 12 19 25 30
August 16 21 27 30
September 13 18 24 27
October 16 18 24 29
November 13 20 26 28
December 13 18 20 27
Speaking at celebrations to mark the 20th anniversary of the African Capacity Building Foundation in Harare yesterday, the Head of State and
Government and Commander-in-Chief of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces said Zimbabwe was addressing the challenge through a number of initiatives.
"For Zimbabwe, we are addressing this cha-llenge in a number of ways as will be seen in the make-up of Government where we have ministries dealing with SMEs, Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment, the development of agriculture and the promotion of the use of information technologies."
President Mugabe said Africa was carrying the largest contingent of the global population of young people with 60 percent of its inhabitants below 24years.
"Yet if managed well, this youth represents Africa's best development asset over the next decades," he said.
"For this to happen, it is important to better understand Africa's youth in order to design and implement the best policies aimed at unlocking its creativity and innovativeness."
President Mugabe said Africa was confronted by many challenges on its path to sustained growth and development than ever before.
"There is no denying that Africa needs to substantially improve growth performance if it is to achieve the Millennium Development Goals against the backdrop of the global financial crisis and economic recession in the Euro Zone," he said.
President Mugabe said Africa still needed to position herself in an increasingly globalised world to find solutions to the challenges the continent is facing.
He singled out high food prices, the need for agricultural transformation, unemployment and political instability.
"Central to the myriad of challenges facing our continent is the inadequacy of human and institutional capacity and the absence of a systematic and institutionalised mechanism for peer learning and experience
sharing amongst countries," President Mugabe said.
He said there was an urgent need for a public sector that is knowledgeable, efficient, empowered and committed and a private sector that is innovative, growth-oriented and competitive.
Civil society, he said, should be constructively responsive and capable of collaborating with both the public and private sectors with the view of achieving development goals.
ACBF's commitments to Zimbabwe have amounted to US$18 million in grants.
"These funds have supported the implementation of projects with both national and regional scope," said the President.
"As Government, we welcome ACBF's commitment to work with the Government of Zimbabwe within the framework of its new strategic thinking."
The ACBF has supported Zimbabwe's capacity building project to strengthen the national statistical systems, capacity programme for the Ministry of Regional Integration and International Co-operation and the
public sector management training programme, among others.
ACBF executive secretary Dr Frannie Leatier said her organisation was driving the agenda to end economic dislocations of the 1990s and promote indigenous human capital development.
She said Africa should take charge of its economic development and eradicate poverty.
"We should develop think-tanks and institutionalise dialogue and improve quality of policy, reverse brain drain and pull Africa out of poverty," said Dr Leatier.
ACBF executive board chairperson Mr Paul Baloyi said Africa's economic gains and resources have been eroded in the past 15 years due to broken institutions and conflicts.
He said the global economic crisis impacted negatively on the continent and donor funding had shrunk resulting in economic slowdown.
Mr Baloyi said the leadership in Africa should identify and sustain key elements such as capacity building to capacitate weak elements.
"We are the custodians of our resources and conflicts choke Africa from performing. We need efficiency and good governance," he said.
Finance Minister Tendai Biti, who is an ACBF governor, said Africa was coming from a narrative of pessimism and there was need for continued peace to create a conducive environment for certainty, job creation and food security.
He said the continent required capacity building to attain technical capacity, one of the areas Zimbabwe was still developing.
"We need to rebuild capacity and come up with qualitative elements, which are in line with the social contract. We need to create capacity, retain and utilise it," Minister Biti said.
Month Army Education Rest of Civil Service Pensions
January 12 17 19 20
February 14 21 24 28
March 15 20 26 29
April 12 19 24 27
May 15 22 24 28
June 14 19 25 28
July 12 19 25 30
August 16 21 27 30
September 13 18 24 27
October 16 18 24 29
November 13 20 26 28
December 13 18 20 27
Source - TH