Robert Komakech, a
university graduate, has been trying to access the youth venture capital fund
for over a year now, without much success. Despite being a graduate, Komakech,
a resident of Gulu municipality in Gulu district, is one of thousands of
unemployed graduates, trying to start his own enterprise.
"I have got
business ideas but I can't make them real because I don't have capital,"
he said.
Aware of the
challenges in accessing the highly sought-after youth fund, the government, in
this financial year 2012/2013 introduced a separate "graduate venture
capital fund", to specifically help graduates like Komakech access startup
capital.
Finance Minister
Maria Kiwanuka allocated Shs16 bn to the fund, which was later approved by
Parliament. Just like the youth fund, the graduate venture capital fund is a
joint partnership between the government, with support from the German
Development Agency (Kfw), and the participating banks - Dfcu, Stanbic and
Centenary.
Kiwanuka explained
in her budget speech that the fund is meant to facilitate graduates to develop
bankable project proposals and create or expand enterprises for self-employment
—thus scale down unemployment among graduates.
However, Komakech
is not aware the graduate fund exists. Norbert Kafuuma, another university
graduate, also says he only knows about the youth fund. Kafuuma and Komakech
represent majority of the graduates who are ignorant about the fund.
If there was any
doubt that the graduate fund is all but nonexistent, it was erased when senior
Finance ministry officials claimed they were unaware of it. One even tried to
correct this writer, suggesting that The Observer meant the better-known youth
fund.
Emmanuel
Kitamirike, the Executive Director of Uganda Youth Network (UYONET), also notes
that indeed, majority of the graduates are unaware of the fund, which he blames
on the government,
"Government
has not done enough to popularize the fund apart from the budget
pronouncement," he said.
No guidelines:
In addition to the
graduates' ignorance of the fund, The Observer has also established that the
fund has failed to takeoff, nearly a year after it was announced. MP Gerald
Karuhanga (Youth Western) says no single graduate has got a loan from the fund.
"If you find a
graduate who has got a loan from the graduate fund, I double the money he will
have got and give it to you," Karuhanga says. "The financial year is
coming to an end and yet the money has not been utilized, so where is this
money?" the fiery MP asks.
Karuhanga warns
that if graduates don't stand up and demand accountability, the graduate
venture capital fund may turn out to be a lie to the graduates.
"We don't know
where this money is? We have rumours that it is in Bank of Uganda but doing
what?" Karuhanga wondered.
Karuhanga is also
troubled that since the announcement of the fund, the Finance ministry has not
issued any progress report to Parliament. Karuhanga says he has been consulting
graduates and has given Finance Minister Kiwanuka two weeks to explain where
the money is and why the government is taking too long to roll it out.
"If she fails
to do so in two weeks, we shall mobilize unemployed graduates to storm her
office and demand [the] whereabouts of the money," he stressed. But MP
Patrick Nakabale (Youth Central) says there is no cause for alarm.
"Government is still consulting on the operational framework and harmonization.
Let the graduates wait for the guidelines soon," he said.
Diana Kahunde, the
Corporate Communications Manager at dfcu bank, one of the participating
institutions, acknowledges that banks are yet to receive guidelines and
operational procedures to follow.
"The fund is
still a work in progress and the details plus mechanics have not been shared by
government."
But Kitamirike
faults the government for the delay.
"Why is
government working in reverse gear; it made an announcement and allocated the
money in the budget without the operational framework," he told The
Observer recently.
He says as the
government works out the guidelines of the fund, the graduates should first be
sensitized on entrepreneurship, since most prefer white-collar to blue-collar
jobs.
Kitamirike believes
that owing to the ill-preparedness of graduates for blue-collar jobs, the fund
might not be used to enhance their entrepreneurship and create more jobs for
the graduates.
Proposals:
"We need to
first reorient graduates to shift their mindset from white-collar to
blue-collar job, if this is to generate more jobs," he said.
Currently, he says,
most graduates can't be absorbed in the industry, service and agriculture
sectors since they have no entrepreneurship skills to initiate their own productive
businesses. Experience shows that graduates tend to shun the informal sector.
The problem of graduate unemployment is not likely to be impacted by this fund.
Kitamirike says
that UYONET has already tabled its proposals to government on how the fund should
be streamlined and managed. One of the proposals, he says, is to ensure that
the graduate fund at least benefits half of the unemployed graduates if it is
to create an impact.
"If at the end
only a few graduates access the fund's loan facility, it will be a drop in the
ocean considering the thousands of youth who are churned out of universities
annually," he said.
As graduates wait
for the funds, Kitamirike counsels they should begin identifying innovative
business ideas that can attract funding, create jobs and spur the country's
social-economic growth.
For now, though,
the graduate youth fund seems to be going down the road walked by many policy
statements in Uganda - sounding impressive to the ear, but failing to translate
into meaningful action.
Source: The Observer (Uganda).
This Observer feature is published in partnership with Panos
Eastern Africa, with funding from the European Union's Media for Democratic
Governance and Accountability Project.
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