Investing in young people should be a long term and strategic interest
Kenya is a young country. Sixty one per cent of its population is either children between birth and 14 or youth aged 15 to 24, according to a United Nations 2017 report. Large scale investments in education, health and improving employment interventions for these young people could bring tremendous benefit to the economy of this country.
If these young people remain jobless and without education, they will be frustrated and turn to crime or violence. If we could turn this population of the youth into a skilled working population, we can achieve demographic dividend.
Despite such potential, very little investment is put in young people of this country due to the perceptions that young people are still young and face fewer health risks. But the truth is that young people are at risk. In Kenya, young people account for 52 per cent of new HIV infections.
Unsafe abortion, unintended pregnancies, untreated diseases and infections, non-communicable diseases, child marriage, drug abuse, depression, mental health disorder, female genital mutilation and high unemployment rates are some of the threats young people face.