Tony Elumelu, the entrepreneur, philanthropist and chairman of Heirs
Holdings Ltd., a pan-African investment company, argues that Africa must
do more to tackle the threat of unemployment, which risks derailing
Africa’s economic growth, in an article published on Reuters this week.
Elumelu advocates the launch of a comprehensive, coordinated approach similar to the ‘Marshall Plan’ that was implemented by the United States in Europe after World War II. He suggests that this Marshall Plan be built on the three interdependent ‘pillars’ of development: policy reform and a commitment to the rule of law; investment in infrastructure; and commitment to developing Africa’s manufacturing and processing industries.
Elumelu advocates the launch of a comprehensive, coordinated approach similar to the ‘Marshall Plan’ that was implemented by the United States in Europe after World War II. He suggests that this Marshall Plan be built on the three interdependent ‘pillars’ of development: policy reform and a commitment to the rule of law; investment in infrastructure; and commitment to developing Africa’s manufacturing and processing industries.
Such a plan is needed, Elumelu
highlights in the article, because of the continent’s demographic time
bomb: 122 million Africans are forecast to enter the labour market by
2020, yet economists expect just 54 million new jobs to be created
within the same period.
Elumelu’s investment philosophy, Africapitalism, which advocates the public, private and development sectors working together with the objective of creating economic and social wealth, could provide a way to generate the jobs needed to keep Africa’s path to prosperity on track.
Elumelu’s investment philosophy, Africapitalism, which advocates the public, private and development sectors working together with the objective of creating economic and social wealth, could provide a way to generate the jobs needed to keep Africa’s path to prosperity on track.

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