.........Africa’s agenda must change to prioritize jobs and power, Elumelu
cautions
“Embrace
legacy, you are not here forever,” Mr. Tony O. Elumelu, CON, Chairman
of Heirs Holdings,
and Founder of the Tony Elumelu Foundation, urged policymakers as he
represented the African private sector at the opening session of the
2017 World Economic Forum on Africa which began in Durban, South Africa,
on Wednesday May 3. “You
must improve the business terrain to deal decisively with issues of
joblessness and poverty,” he advised, “the environment is stifling,
entrepreneurs provide their own water, their own transport, their own
electricity, how are they going to succeed? “
He made this plea alongside other panellists including Winne Byanyima, Executive Director, Oxfam; Lindiwe Mazibuko, Former Leader of the Opposition, Parliament of South Africa; and Rich Lesser, Global CEO/President Boston Consulting Group (BCG), em
Elumelu,
who also chairs the board of Transcorp Plc with investments in power,
oil & gas and
hospitality, stressed the looming threat of widespread joblessness,
labelling it the “greatest challenge for the continent”. His solution is
straightforward: entrepreneurship development. Illustrating the power
of entrepreneurship to transform economies, Elumelu
recounted his own experience supporting entrepreneurs from 54 African
countries.
As
important as the private sector is, Elumelu and his co-panellists
reiterated that the private
sector alone cannot achieve much without the critical role government
must play. For Elumelu, it is all about legacy: “If our political
leaders embrace legacy and it guides them, they will fix Africa.”
Supporting
him, Mr. Klaus Schwab, the Executive Chairman of the World Economic
Forum, agreed
that leaders must "act as the stewards of the generations coming behind
them, think about their legacy and accept that they will not be in
office for life.”
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