LABOUR and Social Security permanent secretary Winnie Mwenda has said the Zambian Government has placed entrepreneurship development and the setting up of small and medium entrepreneurship on top of its agenda for job creation.
Dr Mwenda said that this is because 80 percent of Zambia’s population works in the informal economy.
She was speaking in Siavonga on Saturday when she closed a week-long entrepreneurship international workshop that was organised by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and Commonwealth Youth Progamme.
Dr Mwenda said that Government and other stakeholders have put up measures that are aimed at boosting entrepreneurship development, focusing on business facilitation, quality empowerment and market support.
She also said the workshop was important not only for Zambia but for the developing world which needs to invest more in entrepreneurship skills training.
Dr Mwenda commended ILO director for Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique Jerry Finnegan for his commitment to matters pertaining to employment creation.
Speaking earlier, Mr Finnegan urged participants who were drawn mostly from African nations to help entrepreneurs in their respective countries gain from the skills that they have gathered from the workshop.
“The work you have done in Siavonga will be in vain unless you go back to your respective nations and help entrepreneurs. You now have what it takes to facilitate business development support services that help young people build sustainable enterprises,” he said.
Mr Finnegan said that ILO is aware of the risks young people face in work places, adding that his organisation will continue to promote decent work and rights.
Meanwhile, Mr Finnegan will this month retire from ILO after serving for more than 21 years.
Mr Finnegan, who has worked across the globe and has had two-term contracts manning the Zambian ILO office, said he will leave ILO a happy man as most of the programmes that he initiated have worked well.
[Zambia Daily Mail]