Creating a Youth Employment
Center
By Valeriu Popovic, Moldova
A
few months before International Youth Parliament 2000 (IYP2000),
I started a project called the Career Planning Center, with the
aim of helping young professionals from the Balti region find a
job.
At the IYP2000
meeting, I attended a presentation on the Making
Cents
curriculum and also met with Poonam Ahluwalia, director of YES 2002.
Through these experiences, I realized that the need for employment
comes more from youth who have ideas and motivation but no skills
and resources. I thought about using Future Business Leaders Association's
informational and human resources to help these young people start
their own businesses and become job creators rather than job seekers.
In April 2001, we established the Youth Employment Center (YEC)
in Balti, Moldova.
Our main role
in the region is to be a facilitator for youth to create and finance
their own micro-businesses. Our project provides entrepreneurial
training, using Making Cents, and we organize dialogues
between youth with micro-businesses and local investors and financial
institutions.
The Center consists
of five staff members between 20 and 23 years old, who have degrees
mainly in business education or management and accounting. These
students were recommended by Economics faculty at Balti State University.
They proudly devote their talent to helping other youth create their
own businesses.
During the
project implementation period, we intend to train 100 young people
from the Balti region between the ages of 18 and 30. However, requests
for participation in our training programs show that the number
will exceed the initial planned number of trainees. We have already
selected 11 business ideas for implementation in the first quarter
of 2002. Five of these 11 projects were already launched on the
Internet, as part of YEC's eBusiness Development Program, organized
by the Bureau for Educational and Cultural Affairs, the U.S. Department
of State, and the IREX Moldova Program.
The success
shown in urban areas emphasized the value and importance of such
a project for Moldova. We would like to expand the project to rural
areas in northern Moldova. We plan to implement a Rural Youth Employment
Program that will take as a model the village of Ciuciulea, one
of the biggest villages in the Balti region (4,000 inhabitants).
YEC's trainers will promote three extended training programs for
50 youth from this village. We intend to create 10 micro-businesses
in this village, employing these youth and contributing to the development
of the village. This program will also give us the opportunity to
conduct a case study on rural youth employment for Moldova and elaborate
a youth employment strategy for northern Moldova. We hope to present
this study at YES 2002 and then propose to local governments that
they begin implementing the program in their regions.
One of the key
challenges has been the lack of support from national, regional,
and local leaders. Initially, I thought that this project would
get the attention of local and regional governments, but only the
regional employment office has participated, requesting that we
train the unemployed young people who come to them. However, I consider
it more valuable to have the appreciation and interest from the
target group of young people, rather than from government leaders
and agencies.
Entrepreneurial
education of youngsters in Moldova—together with good information
and consultation—are key factors for a successful youth
employment strategy. This "recipe" has created a new
mindset in the youth trained at YEC, many of whom are willing
to volunteer
to tutor
other youth who are interested in starting their own businesses.
For questions or comments, contact mosaic@edc.org.
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