U.S
Secretary of Commerce, Penny Pritzker; Select Tony Elumelu Foundation
Entrepreneurs; Kehinde Yinusa, Evans George, Nosakhare Oyegun, Belema
Alagun and Founder Tony Elumelu Foundation, Mr. Tony Elumelu during
the panel and roundtable discussion between members of the U.S.
Presidential Advisory Council on Doing Business in Africa (PACDBIA) and a
diverse community of entrepreneurs hosted by Tony Elumelu Foundation
and UBA Plc in Lagos yesterday.
Group
Managing Director United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc, Mr. Phillips
Oduoza; US Secretary of Commerce, Penny Pritzker; UBA Chairman, Mr. Tony
Elumelu during the panel and roundtable discussion between members of
the U.S. Presidential Advisory Council on Doing Business in Africa
(PACDBIA) and a diverse community of entrepreneurs hosted by Tony
Elumelu Foundation and UBA Plc in Lagos yesterday.
The
Tony Elumelu Foundation and United Bank for Africa Plc (UBA) partnered
with the United States Department of Commerce to host a panel and
roundtable discussion between members of the U.S. Presidential Council
on Doing Business in Africa (PCDBIA)and a diverse community of African
entrepreneurs.
The
11 person U.S. delegation, along with representatives of several U.S.
government trade and investment-focused agencies, was led by the
Honourable Penny Pritzker – U.S. Secretary of Commerce. The Council
visited Lagos as part of a fact-finding mission to help inform their
upcoming report to President Obama on how to strengthen commercial
engagement between the U.S. and Africa, which will result in
mutually-beneficial growth.
The event – titled “Unleashing
Africa’s Entrepreneurs: Strengthening the Entrepreneurial Ecosystem to
Empower the Next Generation of Africa’s Business Leaders” – brought
together American business leaders and Nigerian entrepreneurs to
discuss challenges, solutions and innovations in the current African
business environment. The event was designed to allow representatives of
the U.S. Government to participate in direct and substantive
discussions with Africa’s emerging business leaders – an opportunity to
engage in a dialogue that has the potential to influence U.S. foreign
policy for Africa.
"President
Obama believes, as I do, that the American private sector, working in
partnership with the African business community, and
African entrepreneurs can help address many of the continent’s most
pressing challenges, including creating jobs and opportunity for young
people across the continent," said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny
Pritzker. "I am proud to lead our Administration’s effort to support and
empower aspiring entrepreneurs, both in the United States and across
the globe."
UBA
Chairman Tony O. Elumelu, through his eponymous Foundation, hosted the
delegation, and expressed gratitude for the collaborative approach the
Council and U.S. Commerce Department are taking in engaging local
entrepreneurs as part of their deliberations.
“Too
often, well-meaning foreign policy-makers develop strategies to help
Africans without actually engaging us,” he said. “In order to
effectively help or support people, we should ask them what kind of help
they want. So, I thank you for doing that with African businesses.”
For
the U.S. Government, this trip begins the Road to GES 2016 – the Global
Entrepreneurship Summit; an annual gathering of entrepreneurs at all
stages of business development, designed to demonstrate the U.S.
Government’s commitment to fostering entrepreneurship around the world.
Expressly
designed to address the needs of and provide opportunities for the next
generation of African entrepreneurs, the entrepreneurs in attendance
included SMEs supported by UBA Plc, UNCTAD’s EMPRETEC Nigeria Foundation
and those selected for the Tony Elumelu Entrepreneurship Programme
(TEEP) – a 10-year, $100 million commitment by the Tony Elumelu
Foundation to empower the next generation of Africa’s entrepreneurs with
businesses that have the potential to generate income and jobs for
their nations.
The
Tony Elumelu Entrepreneurs in attendance were selected from the
Agriculture, Media & Entertainment, ICT, Transport, Healthcare and
Financial Services sectors. Their startups reflect the potential that
entrepreneurship holds for spurring Africa's transformation; already,
they have begun creating jobs in their local communities and generating
tax revenues for governments earning them recognition in both local and
international media.
No comments:
Post a Comment