CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

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Mena youth tops world’s unemployed

Published: 14 Mar 2013 - 04:06 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2022 - 02:33 pm

DOHA: Qatar-based Silatech and the Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP) concluded a two-day workshop in Rabat yesterday aimed to help  young people in the region gain  access to financial services. 

Young people in the Middle East and North Africa (Mena) have the lowest levels of access to financial services and the highest rates of youth unemployment, in the world. 

According to the World Bank, only 13 percent of young people (age 15-24) in the Mena region have accounts at a formal financial institution compared to a worldwide average of 37 percent, and 17 percent in the next closest region, sub-Saharan Africa. Youth unemployment in the Mena region is the world’s highest, at 25 percent. 

The ‘Youth Financial Inclusion in the Mena Region’ event drew over 80 representatives from microfinance institutions, government agencies, think-tanks, global organisations and civil society to share insights into why levels of youth financial access in the region are low, and what can be done to improve the situation. Participants shared results of recent research, explored opportunities for new programme interventions and discussed governmental policy alternatives to help increase youth financial access throughout the region. 

Dr Nader Kabbani, Director of Research and Policy at Silatech, said: “When young people are ‘banked,’ or participate in formal financial institutions, they gain access to resources and services such as savings accounts, small loans to start new businesses, or other types of products that help them build their capital and expand opportunities available to them.

“At the moment, young people in the Arab world do their best to get access to these resources through informal channels such as family and friends.

“We hope workshops like this will help open the region’s financial resources to young people and help make financial institutions aware of the huge, and largely untapped, youth market that is available to them.”

“In most countries in the Mena region, the so-called ‘youth bulge’ presents an exciting opportunity for financial institutions to engage an entire generation,” said Mayada El Zoghbi, Senior Microfinance Specialist with CGAP. 

A recent CGAP research shows that “through savings banks may be able to achieve deeper, longer lasting relationships with the next generation of people needing access to safe, secure and convenient savings, alongside other financial services. 

“And that next generation could grow up better equipped to use a variety of tools to plan for the future, achieve savings discipline and manage their financial lives — interfacing with the financial sector in a safe, savvy way that is productive for clients, banks and society.”

The Peninsula