Saturday Nov 30, 2024
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Asia Pacific’s largest youth-led social entrepreneurship movement, co-led by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the Citi Foundation, will culminate in the third Youth Co:Lab Regional Summit yesterday.
The three-day virtual event brings together over 4,700 young social entrepreneurs, incubators, accelerators, investors and governments across 120 countries and territories, to turn sustainable development ideas into viable business models.
The Summit will also see the release of a research report conducted by Youth Co:Lab titled ‘One Year On: How Young Entrepreneurs in Asia-Pacific Responded to COVID-19’. The report discloses how the pandemic has challenged youth-led enterprises in Asia and the Pacific on multiple fronts.
The survey shows that 92% have been negatively impacted by COVID-19, with 85% shrinking their businesses or limiting their growth to survive. Despite this, the agility and resilience of youth-led enterprises is evident as 87% changed and adapted their business strategy in response to the pandemic. A majority 86% have innovated to develop new products and services while transforming their operating models.
“It is this belief in the ingenuity and energy of young people that inspired UNDP together with Citi Foundation to initiate Youth Co:Lab in 2017, to empower and invest in you, the young people of Asia-Pacific, to drive the accelerated implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals. And it needs your enthusiastic leadership, can-do spirit and bold entrepreneurship,” UNDP Regional Bureau for Asia and the Pacific Assistant Secretary-General, Assistant Administrator and Director Kanni Wignaraja said.
Asia Pacific is home to 55% of the world’s young people, or 660 million youth between the ages of 15 to 24. This segment accounts for almost half of the region’s unemployed. The COVID-19 pandemic and resulting economic turmoil have exacerbated the segment’s unemployment crisis. At the same time, young people are also leading the response to the crisis through volunteering, social innovation, and activism.
“COVID-19 recovery strategies must incorporate measures to tackle the worsening youth unemployment crisis. Social entrepreneurship offers a route for young people to create jobs, tackle challenges faced by their communities, and drive inclusive growth and sustainable development,” Citi Asia Pacific CEO Peter Babej said. “Citi and the Citi Foundation are committed to working with all partners to help young people develop their own solutions to the biggest social problems impacting their communities, and meet the Sustainable Development Goals.”
The Summit will see young people share ideas and inspire each other in innovation and leadership, and drive change in an effort to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. Developmental challenges will be discussed, including climate change, gender equality and female empowerment, and how to ensure no one is left behind.
Over the last four years, Youth Co:Lab programs have been implemented in 25 countries and territories across the region, with national dialogues, regional summits and social innovation challenges reaching over 75,000 participants. The initiative has benefitted over 8,000 young social entrepreneurs and helped launch or improve over 1,000 social enterprises.
Youth Co:Lab has also established partnerships with 192 key ecosystem players to strengthen the Youth Empowerment Alliance. The aim is to support young entrepreneurs, particularly women and marginalised youth, by connecting them with businesses, incubators, accelerators, and financing options, to develop their ideas into viable business models for sustainable social impact.