Tony Elumelu Joins Jared Kushner, Lagarde, World Leaders to Launch US Government Growth Strategy for Palestine and Middle East
Heads of States and other global leaders convened at the Peace to
Prosperity Workshop in Bahrain, organised by the Presidency of the
United
States of America in partnership with the host government, the Kingdom
of Bahrain, to launch the US growth strategy for Palestine and the
Middle East; a first step in the long journey towards establishing an
enduring future for the region; the West Bank, Gaza,
and beyond.
He
continued, “The Tony Elumelu Foundation is ready to deploy our
expertise in collaboration with
the wealthy elite from the Middle East region, to create an affirmative
plan, and send a strong message of hope for the Palestinian young
people. If we prioritise them and create the right future for them, we
will signal a new beginning in this part of the
world. Only then will we achieve security and peace permanently because
these young people will become inclusive stakeholders and the true
champions of prosperity.”
Providing
the African perspective upon special invitation from the US Government,
Tony Elumelu, Founder, the Tony Elumelu Foundation and Chairman, the
United Bank for Africa, headlined the summit, speaking on the opening
plenary alongside Christine Lagarde, Managing Director, International
Monetary Fund (IMF); and HE Mohammed Al-Sheikh,
Minister of State & Member of the Council of Ministers, Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia, to share practical recommendations to unlock future
economic prosperity for the Palestinian people, using what is done at
the Tony Elumelu Foundation as a replicable model for
the economic empowerment of young men and women from the West Bank and
Gaza.
Elumelu
stressed the urgency and importance of supporting and empowering young
Palestinians to
ignite the entrepreneurial ecosystem and strengthen the Palestinian
economy. For stable growth, he reiterated that young Palestinians must
be empowered with jobs and economic opportunity to contribute
meaningfully to their nation’s development.
“I
come from Africa; and the reality is that we do have a lot of
similarities with the Palestinian
people; especially in the area of demographic make up. With over 60% of
its nearly 5 million strong population under 30, the young people of
Palestine need Jobs Jobs and more Jobs! Without jobs, there will be no
economic hope. Big corporations and government
alone cannot supply the jobs demanded by Palestine’s demographic
pressures. We need SMEs and startups to address joblessness in the
region, create jobs and opportunities in local communities for millions
of our Palestinian young brothers and sisters to become
employed, meaningfully engaged, and full of economic hope, which in
turn leads them away from extremism.”
The
renowned investor and philanthropist who is leading by example through
the Tony Elumelu Foundation which has committed US$100m to empower
young African entrepreneurs, called on endowed Middle Easterners and
their philanthropies to step up and become more involved in empowering
the young ones of Palestine. As he explained, “In
the 21st century, we cannot keep relying on western donors to help
empower our own people; we must step up and create a platform where they
may partner with us for scale, just as we are doing at the Tony Elumelu
Foundation.”
The
Tony Elumelu Foundation annually identities and empowers entrepreneurs
across all of Africa’s
54 countries with non-refundable seed capital of $5000 each, mentoring
and training, and in over five years, has supported 7,520 young
Africans. To resolve joblessness in the region, Mr Elumelu offered his
Foundation’s unique economic empowerment model to
be replicated in Palestine. “Young Palestinian people need similar
opportunities like the ones we currently give young African
entrepreneurs through the Tony Elumelu Foundation. We acknowledge that
given Africa’s huge numbers, we are touching only a top of
the iceberg, but we have seen first-hand how this model transforms
individual lives, families, communities and cities.”
Agreeing
with Elumelu on his call for an increased focus on SMEs and young
people, Saudi Arabia’s
Minister of State Mohammed al-Sheikh, stated: “The younger population
and proper planning is essential to creating economic prosperity in the
West Bank and in Gaza. If you look at the demographics in the region, it
is a young population. As the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia looked to diversify its economy and carry out the
structural changes to be less reliant on oil revenue, this required real
commitment and hard work and buy in from everybody, with
small-to-medium enterprises at the front and center of the Kingdom's
Vision 2030.”
Elumelu
also called on the government to play its own role in supporting and
prioritising the
young people of Palestine: “Governments must play their own role:
ensuring good governance is in place, prioritising infrastructure and
the fight against corruption, and creating an enabling and conducive
environment so that when these young Palestinians get
opportunities, they can succeed.”
He
continued: “As an investor, something that speaks volumes to me when I
want to chose a country
to invest in is this: is the private sector in that environment doing
well? Do they have small and medium scale enterprises that are
flourishing? This to me is the real signal of how successful my
investment will be because what it is good for local investors
is good for international investors. If economic conditions for local
investors are not favorable, they can’t be for foreign investors.
Government must ensure that local SMEs thrive to signal to global
investment community that Palestine is open for business.”
Joining
Elumelu in advising on the role of the government in creating a
conducive environment
for the private sector, Christine Lagarde, MD, IMF added, “We have seen
a pressing need for capacity development in the field of public finance
management, central bank strength and domestic revenue mobilization.
These are the background in which private sector
can have a predictable environment within which they can operate.
Advising
development agencies on a more inclusive model for even greater impact,
Elumelu stated:
“Development agencies should also not sit in their offices abroad to
design growth programmes and strategies for the Palestinian region, but
must ensure that the people of Palestine are actively involved in
pulling their people out of poverty. Development
agencies must assist in a strategic manner, working with local partners
who understand local nuances, so that the over $19 billion spent so far
by the World bank and allied institutions on innovation and
entrepreneurship is more impactful, transforms more
lives and addresses the real issues on ground.”
In
conclusion, the founder of the Tony Elumelu Foundation commended the US
Government for this
timely initiative and intervention but counseled on the importance of
longevity and sustainability. “For what we are gathered here to be
sustainable, endure over time and lead to sustained prosperity, we must
involve the Palestine people. Until we collectively
agree that any economic plan we put in place for Palestine and the
region must be anchored by and on the small and medium scale enterprises
to be permanent and fundamentally address the issues, we will continue
to rely on quick fixes. We must prioritise inclusive
growth that brings all to the table - women and youth especially -
which in turn will create more hope and beget more security and peace.
To achieve this, there must be collaboration between the Palestinian
people, friends of Palestine, neighbours of Palestine,
and led by the wealthy and endowed elite in the Middle east, to work
together to economically empower young Palestinians. It is not too
difficult a task for us to touch significant numbers out of the 2-3
million youth in the region.”
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