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Unemployment level, a time bomb – Obasanjo



Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said Nigeria is sitting on a keg of gun power because of its high unemployment rate.
 
He said this while delivering the 16th Annual Lecture of the Agricultural and Rural Management Training Institute in Ilorin, Kwara State on Thursday.

Obasanjo identified the development of the agricultural sector as not only capable of providing massive jobs for the country’s teeming youths but boosting the foreign exchange earnings.
 
The former President said, “The number of Nigerian universities is going to about 150 now, we have a problem. The students coming out of the universities do not have hope of getting employment. This means we are sitting on a keg of gun powder. An idle hand is the devil’s workshop. But a hopeless idle hand is a tinder box.”
 
Obasanjo, who spoke on ‘Managing agriculture as a business: A practitioner’s perspective,’ said agriculture should be seen as business.
 
He said in Nigeria, the development of agriculture and its ability to become the lifeline of the economy were threatened by the low capacity of agrobusiness owners to manage their enterprises.
Obasanjo added that the trend could be reversed if agrobusiness operators began to acquire management skills for their businesses.
 
He advised Nigerian farmers and agro-business owners to take advantage of the services provided by ARMTI in order to advance in the sector.
 
He said the impression that agriculture is a pastime requiring little or no business and management skills should be discarded.
 
Obasanjo, who added that there should be focus on the business side of agriculture, stated that as the world continued to evolve, there existed a number of opportunities for developing agriculture as a business.
 
He noted that a critical opportunity was the rapid growth in world population.
 
According to him, current estimates indicate that there are over seven billion people in the world today, all of who depend on one agricultural produce or the other to survive.
 
He noted that yet, nearly one billion people have no access to adequate food and nutrition Obasanjo said, “In less than four decades from now, world population is expected to grow to over nine billion, significantly increasing the demand for food and other agricultural produce. Some projections show that global food production would need to jump to 70 per cent or 100 per cent to feed a population of nine billion in 2050.
 
“The World Economic Forum recognises that in order to achieve this, the world will need a New Vision for Agriculture – delivering food security, environmental sustainability and economic opportunities through agriculture.”
 
Obasanjo said this new agriculture vision was hinged on developing a shared agenda for action and fostering multi-stakeholder collaboration to achieve sustainable agricultural growth through market-based solutions.
 
He added that, in essence, the task of meeting the world’s food demand now and in the future rested on the shoulders of small, medium and large scale farmers all over the world, especially in Africa.
 
“The question now is how seriously are Africans, or to be specific Nigerian farmers taking this challenge? If the success of our agro-entreprises depends on how efficient we are as managers, what management strategies are we adopting to reduce costs and increase agricultural yield? Are there lessons we can share with one another on managing agriculture as a business?” he said.
 
According to him, for decades, since 1960, when most African states gained independence , the continent had witnessed stagnating or declining per capita income and agricultural output although it holds about 60 per cent of global uncultivated land.
 
He said with roughly 60 per cent of the region’s labour, and 90 per cent of the region’s poor, currently working directly in agriculture, it is difficult to imagine how significant poverty reduction in Africa could occur without increased productivity in agriculture.
 
Chief Executive of ARMTI, Mr. Samuel Afolayan, said agriculture should be taken more seriously.
 
Punch
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5 comments

  1. Obasanjo please emulate IBB....keep quiet

    ReplyDelete
  2. why must he keep quiet when he was the one who cause the present problem by forcing this moron,empty vessel GEJ on us. He knows the reality that is why he said it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agreed. He and his mates put us in this mess. Now he acts like he was not part of the problem.

      Delete
  3. I wonder the kind of leaders we have in nigeria and africa as a whole,what does he do about youth unemployment when he was in power?posterity will not forgive him and his cohorts.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Obasanjo had the opportunity to make a positive change but he never did, he would play politics with everything; so why is he just identifying the problem now.I pray those that are there now will do something good and on time too. Posterity will judge all of them whether good or bad.

    ReplyDelete

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