Business
Ex-NUC Boss Tasks FG On Infrastructure
A former Executive Secre
tary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof. Peter Okebukola , has called on the Federal Government to provide the necessary infrastructure to boost economic growth and development.
Okebukola made the call last Tuesday, at the 1st International Conference of the Faculty of Education, Lead City University (LCU), Ibadan.
The Tide reports that the forum was held in partnership with Global Education Network.
Okebukola said problems such as corruption, epileptic power supply and inordinate quest for political power had affected industrial growth and development in the country.
Government at all levels, he said, should show greater concern for industrial growth and the plight of existing industries.
“The Federal Government should address the problem of epileptic power supply for meaningful development to happen.
“Without electricity, we cannot make meaningful progress. There should be 24 hours electricity in the country.
“President Goodluck Jonathan told us that the government was making efforts toward generating 4,000 megawatts.
“South Africa, which is a smaller nation is generating nothing less than 40,000 megawatts; we need nothing less than 170,000 megawatts,’’ he said.
Okebukola also urged universities in the country to introduce entrepreneurial studies into the institution’s curriculum.
“ Nigerian graduates are among the best in Africa. The issue is that graduates don’t get jobs nowadays because there are no jobs as before.
“Entrepreneurship is about practice and not theory. In schools where emphasis is given to entrepreneurial training, most of the undergraduates are now entrepreneurs,’’ Okebukola said.
The Acting Dean, Faculty of Education, LCU, Dr Afolakemi Oredein, advised students to take advantage of the entrepreneurial skills being instilled in them by the institution.
A former Ambassador to Botswana and Belgium, Prof. Alaba Ogunsanwo, lamented that 54 per cent of Nigerian youths were unemployed as at 2013.
“We have multiple unemployment rates by race, gender, geography, and above all educational attainment.
“When people talk of unemployment crises, it would be more accurate to speak of education crises or a crisis of men whose skills are not in great demand at a particular point in time and place,’’ Ogunsanwo said.
According to him, entrepreneurship could only enhance employability and not education.
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