CBN representative at a one-day advocacy programme in Abuja, Mr Abubakar Albasu, said the Apex bank was already collaborating with Linking the Youth of Nigeria thorough Exchange (LYNX) Nigeria, a non-governmental organisation among others, to drive home this objective.
He stressed the relevance of financial inclusion, saying CBN could not do it alone and that there was the need to partner with all relevant stakeholders to make the idea work.
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He said many stakeholders had also called for the infusion of some elements of financial education into the country’s school curriculum or it be allowed to stand alone as a subject because of its importance.
Albasu said that CBN and the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) had been partnering for many years to reach out to youths by using the service to teach financial education especially in agriculture in rural areas.
He said the CBN would continue to welcome any partnership that could contribute to the learning of financial education, using approaches outside of the school curriculum.
On her part, the National Progamme Officer of LYNX Nigeria, Ganiyu Ibikunle, revealed that the organisation had trained over 30,000 youths in Nigeria from 2004 till date, enriching them with knowledge and experience in order to develop a stronger sense of social and financial responsibility, commitment to community development and nation building.