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How the Private Sector Can Create Jobs and Drive Development in Western and Central Africa

Workers at a factory

Every year in Western and Central Africa, 6 million young people enter the labour force, while only about half a million new jobs are created.  This enormous jobs deficit means that most entrants into the workforce work in the informal sector, with insecure income, low-quality employment, and very little hope of escaping poverty.

  The repercussions of this unemployment epidemic are profound: a breakdown in the social contract, social and political unrest, wasted human potential and increased poverty.

What is holding Western and Central Africa back from the kind of dynamic job creation seen in other developing regions? 

Highly commodity-dependent economies that rely on export revenue but do not create jobs.  Low levels of trade due to high trade barriers.  The onerous presence of state-owned enterprises crowd out the private sector.

Declining foreign investment prevents the countries in the region from reaping the benefits of technology transfer, access to global markets, and job creation.

The Catalyst: Private Sector Development

Addressing the unemployment challenge is no easy task. However, developing and nurturing a vibrant private sector has to be at the core. The private sector is an engine of economic growth, innovation, and job creation.

The tax revenues generated from thriving businesses enable governments to invest in essential public services such as healthcare, education, and infrastructure, further improving the overall quality of life for citizens.

Yet the private sector has been repressed in many countries in Western and Central Africa and its role in generating jobs is falling woefully short.

So, what can be done?

To unleash the private sector’s power to invest, generate jobs, catalyze a green transition and drive economic transformation, this is what needs to change:

Governments in Western and Central Africa can no longer rely on a narrow band of extractives and exports to keep their economies strong. To create the jobs needed, the private sector must be allowed to flourish, creating a virtuous cycle of job creation, competition, productivity, and exports.  There simply is no other option.

By ABEBE ADUGNA

How the Private Sector Can Create Jobs and Drive Development in Western and Central Africa

https://blogs.worldbank.org/en/africacan/private-sector-create-jobs-drive-development

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