About National Youth Development Agency (NYDA)

About National Youth Development Agency (NYDA)

The National Youth Development Agency (NYDA) is a South African-based agency established primarily to tackle challenges that the nation’s youth are faced with. The NYDA was established by an Act of parliament, Act no 54 of 2008. The institution was established to be a single, unitary structure, established to address youth development issues at National, Provincial and Local government level. The existence of the NYDA should be located within the broad context of South Africa’s development dynamics. Similar to many developing countries, South Africa has a large population of youth, those between the ages 14-35 represent 42% of the total population. Given the youthful nature of the South African population much of the socio-economic challenges faced by the nation, i.e. poverty, inequality and joblessness, poor health, etc, are borne by the youth. The gravity of challenges South Africa is faced with, require multi-pronged efforts, that simultaneously promote the development of sustainable livelihoods, reduce poverty, inequality and prioritise the development of policies which create an enabling environment for youth development.
The NYDA plays a leading role in ensuring that all major stakeholder’s, i.e government, the private sector and civil society, prioritise youth development and contribute towards identifying and implementing lasting solutions which address youth development challenges.
 
Furthermore, the NYDA designs and implements programmes aimed at improving the lives and opportunities available to youth. These programmes could be clustered as follows:
At an individual level (Micro level), the NYDA provides direct services to youth in the form of information-provision, career guidance services, mentorship, skills development and training, entrepreneurial development and support, health awareness programmes and involvement in sport.
At a Community level (Meso Level), the NYDA encourages young people to be catalysts for change in their communities through involvement in community development activities, social cohesion activities, national youth service programmes and dialogues.
At a Provincial and National level (Macro Level), through its policy development, partnerships and research programmes, the NYDA facilitates the participation of youth in developing key policy inputs which shape the socio-economic landscape of South Africa.
 
The National Youth Development Agency derives its mandate from legislative frameworks such as the NYDA Act (54 of 2008), the National Youth Policy (2009-2014) and the draft Integrated Youth Development Strategy as adopted by the Youth Convention of 2006. The NYDA activities could be summarised as follows:

  1. a) Lobby and advocate for integration and mainstreaming of youth development in all spheres of government, private sector and civil society
  2. b)Initiate, implement, facilitate and co-ordinate youth development programmes
  3. c) Monitor and evaluate youth development interventions across the board and Mobilise youth for active participation in civil society engagements

 
VISION
 
To be a Credible and Capable Development Agency for South Africa’s Youth
 
MISSION

  • To Mainstream youth issues into society and
  • To facilitate youth development with all sectors of society

VALUES

  • Excellence
  • Respect
  • Integrity and Honesty
  • Care
  • Punctuality and timeliness

 
NYDA’s New Focus
The National Youth Development Agency has shifted its core business primarily away from Enterprise Finance towards Education and Skills Development. The fundamental change in this area of development is the change from loan provision to grant provision for young entrepreneurs. The NYDA no longer offers loan finance to young entrepreneurs, but instead grant finance in the form of micro-finance grants for survivalist youth entrepreneurship and co-operative grants for greater participation of youth in the co-operatives sector.
 
The objective of the Grant Programme is to provide young entrepreneurs an opportunity to access both the financial and non-financial business development support to establish their survivalist businesses. The programme focusses on youth entrepreneurs who are just coming into existence and beginning to display signs of future potential but are not yet fully developed. The grant finance starts from R1 000 to a maximum of R100 000 for any individual or youth co-operative. For more information on this click here.
 
The new plan of the NYDA therefore focusses on tailor-made interventions for job preparedness and placement, a focus on scholarship provision for those who excel in schools, the scaling up of the YouthBuild Programme for out-of-school youth, the increase of second chance opportunities for matriculants and the intensification of our highly successful career guidance programme. The NYDA continues with efforts directed at economic participation offering a range of products, programmes and services to young entrepreneurs in need, albeit as a secondary focus.
 
NYDA Key Performance Areas
The NYDA has adopted the following 5 Key Performance Areas as part of its strategy:

  1. 1.Economic Participation

To assist and facilitate youth participation in the economy leading to improvement of their livelihoods through NYDA grants as financial support and non-financial support interventions.
 

  1. 2.Education and Skills Development

To promote access to quality education and skills, to both in and out-of-school youth through targeted interventions The NYDA will place 22,830 learners in education opportunities over a period of 5 years, these will include young people who want to re-write their matric (21, 978) and those who need bursaries to continue with their higher education studies (852).

  1. Health and Wellbeing

To increase awareness on healthy lifestyles that promote good health practices amongst the youth of South Africa, including the dangers of substance abuse, unprotected sex, nutrition, sexually transmitted diseases and the impact of HIV Infection and Aids among young people in South Africa.
 

  1. 4. Policy and Research

To create and produce youth development information and knowledge that informs the public sector, private sector, and civil society in developing policy, planning, implementation and review of all [100%] of their programmes related to government priorities.

  1. 5.Governance and Administration

To provide effective IT systems, business processes, human resources capacity development and improve operations of the NYDA. To ensure that all NYDA systems and processes support NYDA products and services for effective service delivery.