Young people have lost hope: NYDA

MASS ACTION: National Youth Development Agency chairperson Andile Lungisa. PHOTO: YOLANDE SNYMAN/GCIS
MASS ACTION: National Youth Development Agency chairperson Andile Lungisa. PHOTO: YOLANDE SNYMAN/GCIS

Young people have lost hope for a better life due to rising unemployment, the National Youth Development Agency says

“We are not going to have a bright future in this country if we don’t start investing in youth development now,” chairman Andile Lungisa told reporters in Pretoria.

“By 2025 this generation will be expected to carry the country forward, but it is a generation which was never assisted with skills; it is a generation that has lost hope.” 

Lungisa released a set of guidelines, developed by the agency in a bid to monitor and enforce the introduction of the National Youth Policy endorsed by Cabinet in 2009.

The policy document contains commitments by government and other bodies on services that would be rolled out across the country for youth development.

Lungisa criticised the private sector for not playing an active role towards the youth development goals and skills attainment. “The private sector in South Africa has not really been contributing to youth development. To them youth development does not exist, that is the major challenge,” he said. “We want them to take youth development seriously. If they become part of the skills revolution, at least things will change for the better.” 

He said more that 1.8 million young South Africans had become hopeless and were no longer looking for employment.

Lungisa claimed his organisation had created more than 62,000 jobs, trained more than 84,000 people and disbursed more than 25,000 loans in the past financial year.

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