To fight off unemployment, Iraqi youth plant start-up seeds

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BAGHDAD, Feb 17, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Stuck between an endless waitlist for a
government job and a frail private sector, Iraqi entrepreneurs are taking on
staggering unemployment by establishing their own start-ups.

The first murmurs of this creative spirit were felt in 2013, but the
Islamic State group’s sweep across a third of the country the following year
put many projects on hold.

Now, with IS defeated, co-working spaces and incubators are flourishing in
a country whose unemployment rate hovers around 10 percent but whose public
sector is too bloated to hire.

Many self-starters begin their journey at an aptly named glass building in
central Baghdad: The Station.

There, they sip on coffee, peruse floor-to-ceiling bookshelves for ideas
and grab a seat at clusters of desks where other stylish Iraqis click away at
their laptops.

“We’re trying to create a new generation with a different state of mind,”
said executive director Haidar Hamzoz.

“We want to tell youth that they can start their own project, achieve their
dreams and not just be happy in a government job they didn’t even want,” he
told AFP.

Youth make up around 60 percent of Iraq’s nearly 40 million people.

After graduating from university, many spend years waiting to be appointed
to a job in the government, Iraq’s biggest employer.

Four out of five jobs created in Iraq in recent years are in the public
sector, according to the World Bank.

And in its 2019 budget, the government proposed $52 billion in salaries,
pensions, and social security for its workers — a 15 percent jump from 2018
and more than half the total budget.

But with graduates entering the workforce faster than jobs are created,
many still wait indefinitely for work.

Among youth, 17 percent of men and a whopping 27 percent of women are
unemployed, the World Bank says.

– After IS, innovation reigns –

When IS declared Mosul its seat of power in Iraq back in 2014, resident
Saleh Mahmud was forced to shutter the city’s incubator for would-be
entrepreneurs.

With Mosul now cautiously rebuilding after the jihadists were ousted in
2017, Mahmud is back in business.

“Around 600-700 youth have already passed by Mosul Space” to attend a
seminar or seek out resources as they start their own ventures, said the 23-
year-old.

He was inspired after watching fellow Mosul University graduates hopelessly
“try to hunt down a connection to get a job in the public sphere.”

“A university education isn’t something that gets you a fulfilling job,” he
said.

Another start-up, Dakkakena, is capitalising on Mosul’s rebuilding spirit,
too.

The online shopping service delivers a lorry-full of home goods every day
to at least a dozen families refurnishing after the war.

“On the web, we can sell things for cheaper than stores because we have
fewer costs, like no showrooms,” said founder Yussef al-Noaime, 27.

Noaime fled IS to the Netherlands, where he was introduced to e-commerce.
When he returned home, the computer engineer partnered with another local to
found their venture.

A similar service, Miswag, was set-up in the capital Baghdad in 2014 and
last year reported hundreds of thousands of dollars in profits.

– Banks and big dreams –

On an autumn day, some 70 young Iraqi innovators converged for a three-day
workshop in Baghdad on founding start-ups.

They flitted among round tables planning projects, their Arabic
conversations sprinkled with English terms.

“What we’re doing is showing youth what entrepreneurship is — not
necessarily so they succeed, but so they at least try,” said organiser
Ibrahim al-Zarari.

He said attendees should understand two things: first, that the public
sector is saturated. And second, that oil isn’t the only resource on which
Iraq — OPEC’s second-largest producer — should capitalise.

More than 65 percent of Iraq’s GDP and nearly 90 percent of state revenues
hail from the oil sector. Many youth turn to it for work, but it only employs
one percent of the workforce.

Widespread corruption and bureaucracy also weaken Iraq’s appeal for private
investors. The World Bank ranks it 168th out of 190 for states with a good
business environment.

Under current legislation, private sector employees are not offered the
same labour protections or social benefits as those in the public sector.

And Iraq’s stuttering banking industry appears too cautious to dive in,
said Tamara Raad, 26, who researches start-ups.

“The banks have a role to play. They must make loans without interest and
help young entrepreneurs,” she said.

Banks or no banks, Mahmud in Mosul is already planning how he’ll grow his
business in 2019.

“We will open a new, larger space for new gatherings,” he said excitedly,
to bring together returning designers, developers and other inventors.