Africa

Africa: Report Sees Africa’s Agrifood Sector As Solution to Youth Unemployment

todayFebruary 15, 2024 1

Background
share close

[ad_1]

Nairobi — A new report says Africa’s agrifood sector — which involves the processing, packaging and selling of locally produced food — could be the key to boosting employment rates, income and food security on the continent.

Experts in agriculture, engineering, ecology, nutrition and food security unveiled the 140-page report in Uganda on Wednesday, looking at the challenges young Africans face and the education and skills needed for jobs in the agrifood sector.

Rhoda Tumusiime, a former commissioner for rural economy and agriculture at the African Union, is one of the experts. She said the food business could improve the lives of African youths.

“Food trade provides an opportunity for youth to create jobs for themselves in agribusiness and improve socioeconomic development,” Tumusiime said. The investments in agro-processing and its links to production, marketing and trade “will become a core employment-generating sector in agrifood systems.”

The report provided examples. In Zambia, for instance, authorities launched YAPASA, a project to increase income for rural youth.

The project in the central African country promoted collaboration among different actors in the agriculture sector — mainly small farmers — and better connections between small producers and larger agribusinesses.

Coordinating with the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, the International Labor Organization and the Zambian government, YAPASA created 3,000 jobs and improved 5,000 youth-led rural enterprises.