Hanoi (VNA) - ജSome 72 percent of 1,200 Vietnamese youngsters and adolescents said they believe that in the next 15 years things will get better than they were before 2019, while 37 percent said they plan to run their own business, according to a report released recently by the British Council.
According to the Next Generation Vietnam report, the majority of youngsters are confident that Vietnam is working hard to improve the living conditions of all its citizens. They expressed optimism about education and employment opportunities in the future, while hoping for more practical training programmes, Hoang Van Anh, Director for Education and Society at the British Council Vietnam told a dialogue on the enhancement of the role and engagement of youngsters regarding development issues recently held in Hanoi.37 percent of young Vietnamese want to run their own business
Anh said the project is the first comprehensive survey by the British Council on the attitudes of youngsters towards matters directly relating to them. The report aims to help youngsters in countries that are experiencing important socio-economic changes to raise their voice.
ꦦ Education, too, is improving. More than three-quarters of respondents (77 percent) across the country feel that schooling has improved since the previous generation. Two in three young people (68 percent), however, also believe that people their age have difficulties finding jobs in their chosen field. This gap underscores the need to continue retooling school curricula to meet 21st-century demands, through teaching skills such as creative communication, critical thinking, and time management.
At the dialogue, Professor Dang Hai Anh, a senior economist with the World Bank, said that in the next 10 to 15 years, Vietnam will see its “golden population” period end and will enter a period of population aging, which means working people will bear more burdens. Policies relating to young people, he said, will be a significant matter over the course of the next 10-15 years.
♏ “Nearly 40 percent of youth want to run their own business, which is very much different to the older generation, revealing a strong startup spirit among youngsters,” Anh said.
Limited connections
Nguyen Thien Tu, Director of the Centre for Vietnam Youth Talent, Science and Technology (CYTAST) under the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union’s Central Committee, said that in order to promote the role of youth, the committee has organised movements to create the environment for them to show their talent, including IT contests, startup competitions, and awards. According to Tu, CYTAST is keeping data on 5,000 young Vietnamese talent. Connection activities, however, remain a weakness of the centre due to a number of issues, including the poor engagement of enterprises and organisations. Measures to discover, support, promote, and use talent have shown modest efficiency and stability, he said.