The Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation Institute (ATI) and the Mastercard Foundation Partner to Support over 600,000 Young people to Engage in Inclusive and Dignified Work Opportunities in Agriculture

Samuel Yalew Adela, Mastercard Foundation Country Director for Ethiopia.
26 October 2023
Content from a Premium Partner
Mastercard Foundation

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia — The Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation (ATI) and the Mastercard Foundation have announced the agriculture-focused Dignified Employment for Youth in Ethiopia ("ADEY") Program to support over 600,000 young people, 80 percent of whom will be young women, to engage in inclusive and dignified work opportunities in the agriculture sector.

ADEY will enable new and sustained work opportunities by engaging young people in agricultural inputs and outputs marketing, value addition and agro-processing, livestock, irrigation and mechanization services, availing affordable access to finance, digital agriculture, and ensuring policy improvements.

The program also aims to address youth unemployment by removing systemic barriers that hinder young people from accessing dignified and fulfilling work, and to increase the participation of young people in the agriculture labour market. ADEY aims to create work opportunities for 611,343 young people: 427,940 in self-employment, and 183,403 in wage employment.

Additionally, ADEY builds on the success of ATI's flagship initiative, the Agricultural Commercialization Clusters (ACC) program, which seeks to promote commercialization where smallholder farmers are organized in geographically clustered high-potential areas through market-driven and integrated value chain development of selected commodities.

ADEY also aims to strengthen access to improved agricultural technologies, markets, and finance; improve the competitiveness of youth-owned micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) through capacity-building; enhance the skills and mindsets of young women and men through the provision of training and business development services; and create an enabling environment for young people to access and create work opportunities.

ADEY will be led by ATI and implemented in partnership with a consortium of organizations, including the Organization for Rehabilitation and Development in Amhara (ORDA) Ethiopia, the Oromia Development Association (ODA), HUNDEE, South Ethiopia Peoples' Development Association (SEPDA), Somali Development Association, and PurposeBlack Ethiopia. Additional partners from civil society and the private sector will also be identified to reach young people at the grassroots level.

ATI will also leverage its experience in establishing and supporting MSMEs and designing and disseminating digital technologies in collaboration with various partners along the value chain.

The agriculture-focused Dignified Employment for Youth in Ethiopia (“ADEY”) Program will support over 600,000 young people, 80 percent of whom will be young women, to engage in inclusive and dignified work opportunities in the agriculture sector.

In addition, ATI will make use of its strategic regional presence across the country, through the former Southern Nations and Nationalities People (SNNP), Oromia, and Amhara regions, to seamlessly deliver solutions that reach beneficiaries all the way to the kebele levels. ADEY will also invest $­74.5 million in grants to enhance employment opportunities for young people.

ADEY targets mainly women and seeks to impact their lives by facilitating job opportunities that lead to an improved quality of life in which they will have better decision-making power and autonomy. This will be achieved through:

  • Choosing and working with sectors that present a significantly higher potential for young women,
  • Outlining specific strategies and methodologies aimed at enhancing women's capacities and abilities to participate in these sectors, and
  • Working with market system actors to identify and work on key barriers that prevent young women from participating in these value chains.

"ADEY will have an impact on young women's lives beyond supporting employment opportunities. It will provide them with more agency to take charge of their lives. The young women targeted in this program will be engaged in various socioeconomic issues both within and outside of their community, and they will be prepared to act as influencers for women's empowerment within their respective socioeconomic circles," said Dr Mandefro Nigussie, CEO of the ATI.

"ADEY is a flagship partnership with ATI and partners that aims to address youth unemployment through the removal of systemic barriers that hinder young people from accessing dignified work in agriculture. It will enable young people to acquire skills, technology, and tools to find employment either through self or wage employment in agriculture. We believe ADEY will create a path for a new generation of young farmers and women-led agi-businesses across several value chains. Anchored at centre of the Foundation's Young Africa Works strategy in Ethiopia, ADEY will contribute to our vision of creating a country success story by enabling young people to access dignified and fulfilling work," said Samuel Yalew Adela, Mastercard Foundation Country Director for Ethiopia.

The Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation (ATI) and the Mastercard Foundation have announced the agriculture-focused Dignified Employment for Youth in Ethiopia (“ADEY”) Program. ADEY will enable new and sustained work opportunities by engaging young people in agricultural inputs and outputs marketing, value addition and agro-processing, livestock, irrigation and mechanization services, availing affordable access to finance, digital agriculture, and ensuring policy improvements.

About the ATI

The Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation Institute (ATI) is a strategy and delivery-oriented government institute created to help accelerate the growth and transformation of Ethiopia's agriculture sector which is a key contributor to the country's GDP, exports, and workforce. The ATI's work is centered on improving the livelihoods of smallholder farmers (SHFs) across the country, for improved income, inclusiveness, resilience, and sustainability. The ATI has reached 3.7 million smallholder farmers, created $1.7 million value for the Ethiopian GDP, delivered over 250 strategic studies, lifted 286,000 people out of poverty and implemented over 48 innovative projects.

The ATI has mainstreamed youth employment, gender equality, climate-smart, and nutrition-sensitive agriculture in all its programs and projects with the primary objectives of increased access to sustainable and inclusive job opportunities for youth, inclusivity, and the sustainable use of natural resources while building resilience capacities to shocks at all levels.

About the Mastercard Foundation

The Mastercard Foundation is a registered Canadian charity and one of the largest foundations in the world. It works with visionary organizations to advance education and financial inclusion to enable young people in Africa and Indigenous youth in Canada to access dignified and fulfilling work. Established in 2006 through the generosity of Mastercard when it became a public company, the Foundation is an independent organization separate from the company, with offices in Toronto, Kigali, Accra, Nairobi, Kampala, Lagos, Dakar, and Addis Ababa. Its policies, operations, and program decisions are determined by the Foundation's Board of Directors and leadership.

For more information on the Foundation, please visit www.mastercardfdn.org.

Contact:

The Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation Institute (ATI)
Yimer Dawod, Senior Communication Officer
Telephone: +251 911538023
Email: Yimer.Dawod@ata.gov.et

Mastercard Foundation

Simret Yasabu, Lead, Program Communications
Telephone: +251 988 80 57 66
Email: syasabu@mastercardfdn.org

AllAfrica publishes around 400 reports a day from more than 100 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.

Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica. To address comments or complaints, please Contact us.