Africa must prioritise STEM education to be competitive globally—Exec. Sec. of UNECA 

By Godwill Arthur-Mensah  

Accra, July 18, GNA – Mr Claver Gatete, the Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), has called on African leaders to secure adequate financing to educate African youth in science, technology, and innovation to create skilled manpower personnel for the future. 

That, he said, would enable African countries to be resilient and prepare themselves to compete globally. 

Therefore, African countries should make deliberate efforts to ensure that three-quarters of the African youth without digital skills were equipped to participate fully in Africa’s future workforce, he said. 

To that end, Mr Gatete said it was necessary for Africa to create the right incentives for the private sector to invest in education systems. 

Mr Gatete made the call during the opening of the 45th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council of the African Union in Accra on Thursday. 

The meeting focused on the African Union’s theme for the year 2024, “Educate an African Fit for the 21st Century: Building Resilient Education Systems for Increased Access to Inclusive, Lifelong, Quality and Relevant Learning in Africa”. 

It aimed at accelerating Africa’s integration agenda and promote continental unity. 

Mr Gatete said to rescue the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and achieve AU’s Agenda 2063, it was imperative to put education, science, technology, and innovation at the forefront of the continent’s efforts.  

“Unfortunately, Africa faces significant challenges, primarily due to inadequate financing and high indebtedness.  

“Governments struggle to access long-term concessional finance whilst assistance and foreign direct investment are dwindling. Our limited tax to GDP ratios further constrains domestic resource mobilization,” he observed. 

These financial challenges, he noted, had exacerbated the rising food and energy costs, fueled by increasing and unpredictable extreme weather events, which reduce the fiscal space for countries to operate.  

In addition, he said, the global level playing field remained uneven, with Africa’s borrowing costs being over 10 times higher than Germany and nearly four times higher than the United States of America.   

“We must, therefore, persist in advocating for the reform of a global financial architecture that is fit for purpose,” he added. 

Despite these obstacles, Mr Gatete noted that Africa had immense potential: significant arable land, coveted natural and critical mineral resources, major energy renewable potential, a youthful population, and a sizeable market.  

“We must translate this potential into action, starting with transforming our education systems,” he pointed out.  

“Education must be integrated into our industrial policy. We must not shy away from this approach, as other countries do the same to mitigate external shocks.  

“It should also go without saying that science, technology and innovation (STI) must be at the core of our development agenda.  

“They are the foundation to building strong, competitive, resilient, and prosperous societies.  

“Without STI, we cannot avoid the middle-income trap, neither can we claim the 21st Century. 

“As such, we must make deliberate effort to ensure that the three quarters of Africa’s youth without digital skills are equipped to meaningfully participate in the workforce of the future.  

“We may not be able to play catch up to the USD 370 billion spent on research and development in 2023 by Amazon, Alphabet, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla alone,” he noted. 

He called for deliberate investments in Africa’s research and development, which currently stood at 0.45 percent of GDP, and STEM courses are fundamental to reap the benefits of smart technologies and artificial intelligence.  

He said it just required political will and smart allocation of resources and make smart choices. 

“This is a sine qua non condition if we do not want to leave more people behind,” he added. 

“The current connectivity levels of 40 per cent of primary schools and 50 per cent of lower-secondary schools will not be enough”. 

He called for innovative solutions such as the Giga Initiative, when scaled up can make a real difference, in connecting all schools to internet.   

GNA