As part of effort to create jobs for the boys across the country, the National enterprenuership innovation programme (NEIP) has taggerted over 150, 000 people and set the ball rolling to train over 120,000 youth from the various constituency in the country.
The training is expected to take place at the various metropolitan district and municipal assembly. As the national enterprenuership innovation programme (neip), struggle to control employment chanllenges.
The NEIP Project is a deliberate Jobs and Skills intervention that will train about 100,000 youth to provide them with lifelong Skills to enhance their employability and further ensure sustainable livelihood across the country.
In his address the Chief Executive Officer of NEIP, Kofi Ofosu Nkansah made mention of the fact that, his outfit has empowered the youth and ghanaian population stressing that, the will be vocational skills like making cereals, proccesing yogurt, cctv installation, makeup artistry, key cutting, baking, beading, pedicure & manicure, local drinks, cosmetics, decor, general soft skills and enterprenuership training among others, adding that the NPP government flagship agency is to provide integrated support to startups and small businesses, NEIP believed in youth entrepreneurship.
He further stated that , NEIP would continue to use its resources and platforms to nurture the can-do spirit of budding entrepreneurs through its training programmes and interventions to deliver crucial support in the entrepreneurship space.
The programme dubbed Skills For Jobs Project was launched in Accra digital center.
The NEIP programme want to solve and at the same time empower the youth of Ghana to help reduce unemployment in the country, NEIP is proposing the skills for job project to provide practical skills in some trade areas to help provide jobs for about one hundred and twenty thousand (120,000) youth and to help reduce rural-urban migration as well as address the jobs and skills challenges faced by the youth of Ghana, especially in the rural and peri-urban areas.
source priscilla ndede


