Commonwealth youth call for debt cancellation, job quotas
Monday, June 20, 2022
Delegates during the Commonwealth Youth Forum in Kigali on June 20. Dan Nsengiyumva

Several delegates attending  the Commonwealth Youth Forum have called on the Heads of Government of the 54-member community to back calls for debt cancellation for poor countries in the wake of the impacts of Covid-19 pandemic.

This, they say, will help national efforts to create more jobs.

They say the pandemic resulted in job losses, which mostly affected the youth.

 "Heads of Government must address the issue of unemployment among youth, especially with all that’s happened with the pandemic,” said Moitshopi Matsheng from Botswana.

She noted that "for some governments to save their economies they were forced to take huge loans and yet the youth never got back the jobs they lost. The only way out is for the Commonwealth Heads of Government to speak as one and call for debt cancellation for the poor countries.”

Matsheng, who heads the Botswana national youth association, added that the Commonwealth should also devise policies that compel the private sector to reserve job quotas for the youth.

"Unemployment has been tough on young people; another solution that the Heads of Government may consider is instructing start-ups and private companies  to have a particular quota for youth jobs before they can be licensed,” she said.

Sharonice Busch, a delegate from Namibia, reckons that, as part of a long-term solution to the mismatch between school curricula and the needs of the labour market, leaders of the Commonwealth need to push for a harmonised education system.

"This will help address unemployment to create new opportunities. And this can only happen if the leaders of Commonwealth countries agree on a common plan,” Busch said.

Over 350 young people are meeting in the capital Kigali for the youth forum ahead of the main Commonwealth Head of Government Meeting (CHOGM) this week.

"We need to restart our economies but we can’t do that when we are struggling with debts. We are living in times when poor countries are spending more on servicing foreign debt and acquiring more and more debt, this needs to be addressed,” said Richard Magamba, from Uganda.

He also called on Commonwealth governments to extend tax holidays to start-ups run by the youth.

"Most of our ideas and innovations don’t get to see their first birthday due to high taxes. We need to see the Heads of Government come out of their Retreat saying that ‘we have decided to remove taxes for start-ups for a period of two years’”, he said.

As well as calls for the Heads of Government to take measures to ease burden debt for developing countries and to help create more jobs, youth delegates are also concerned about several other issues, notably climate change.

The three-day Commonwealth Youth Forum, which has been underway at Intare Arena in Gasabo, is scheduled to end Tuesday June 21. Resolutions from the forum will be presented to the Leader’s forum later this week.