Business
Lack Of Funds Stalls SMEDAN’s Entrepreneurship Programme
A Director at the Small and
Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) Dr Friday Okpara, said lack of funding had stalled the take off of its University Entrepreneurship Development Programme (UNEDEP).
Okpara, who is in charge of Strategic Partnership and Liaison, said this in an interview with newsmen, in Abuja on Sunday.
He said the initiative, which was introduced three years ago, was meant to promote self-employment among university graduates.
“For now, the agency is yet to establish any of the entrepreneurship programme due to lack of funding,’’ he said.
He said the programme was launched in collaboration with the National University Commission (NUC) and Kaduna State University but that since then nothing had been done.
Okpara said after the launch, the NUC set up a committee to ensure that the programme was successful but not much was achieved due to lack of fund.
Okpara said a pilot programme was scheduled to be carried out in two tertiary institutions in each of the six geopolitical zones.
He said the programme was also to cover Polytechnics and Colleges of Education.
He said the agency wrote to TEFUND for sponsorship but was yet to get any response.
Okpara, however, said the programme would soon commence as the agency had decided to source for funds through partnerships.
He said the agency currently was at the point of signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with some group of persons that would help drive the programme.
Okpara added that the agency had also signed an MOU with a Canadian NGO.
He said in order to further the programme, SMEDAN had also signed an MOU with Sage-Nigeria, an NGO, to take the entrepreneurship to primary and secondary schools.
The new progamme is called the Nigeria School Entrepreneurship programme.
“This is to enable them understand entrepreneurship philosophy and culture and also have the spirit and financial zeal,’’ he said.
Okpara advised universities to find ways to generate funds through enterprise development.
“I believe that higher institutions should look into their syllabuses and see how they can reorient students towards business ownership and management.
“Entrepreneurship is the only way to solve unemployment in the country,’’ he said.