The Industrial Training Fund and other stakeholders in the labour sector have said that Nigeria should make the best out of her rising population through a skilled workforce.
The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria also further tasked the ITF to leverage on the available €3 million grant to produce more skilled workers in Nigeria.
It noted that the desire of the ITF and other critical stakeholders in the labour sector to have a productive population came during a public hearing session on a bill seeking for amendment of the ITF Act, organised by the Senate Committee on Industries.
The bill sponsored by the ITF and given legislative acceleration by Senator Sa’idu Alkali, was seeking to widen the scope of operations of the training agency regarding provision of skills training in management for technical and entrepreneurial development in the public and private sectors of the economy.
In his presentation at the public hearing, the Director-General of the ITF, Dr Joseph Ari said, ” Amendments being sought through this bill will serve to expand the scope of our operations and enhance our activities.
“In addition, the amendments are imperative now that unemployment in Nigeria has been estimated by the National Bureau of Statistics that Unemployment and Underemployment Report of Quarter four, 2020, to be over 23 million Nigerians despite several surveys indicating the existence of vacancies in several sectors of the national economy that could not be filled because of the lack of requisite skills, which underscores the need for all hands to be on deck to ensure that as many Nigerians as possible are equipped with relevant and contemporary skills.
“The amendments are equally pertinent when you consider the recently released 2022 World Population Prospects by the Population Division of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs that projected that Nigeria’s population will hit 216 million by November 2022, and 375 million by 2050.
“Therefore, if necessary measures are not put in place by empowering the youths with skills for employability and entrepreneurship, the socio-economic problems that we are currently contending with in the country will conceivably escalate.
“An amendment of the Act will enable the Fund to expand its infrastructure to be able to accommodate as many Nigerians as possible that are willing to acquire skills for the national growth and development of the country.”
Supporting the proposed legislation, the President of MAN, Mansur Ahmed, represented by the Abuja Laision Officer, Adeyemi Folorunsho, said the ITF should further be empowered through the passage of the proposed bill.
According to him, in a recent conference on skills and vocational training across the countries in Africa, the ITF was proposed to be the flagship of such training which are to be facilitated by a €3 million grant.
Other stakeholders like the Trade Union Congress, the Nigeria Union of Teachers, the Nigeria Labour Congress, the Nigeria Investment Promotion Commission, the Nigeria Association of Small and Medium Enterprises, etc, in their separate presentations, threw their weights behind the amendment bill proposal.
While closing, the Chairman of the Committee, the lawmaker representing Lagos East, Senator Adetokunbo Abiru, said the amendments being sought in the ITF Act were very necessary towards making Nigeria move with global trends as far as globally competitive skills training were concerned.