Energy filled the room as Gauteng MEC for Human Settlements, Urban Planning, Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Lebogang Maile, addressed the 2025 Youth Investment Indaba. The event gathered policy leaders, business executives, and young entrepreneurs, all united by one vision: empowering Gauteng’s youth to drive the province’s economic transformation.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!Held under the theme “Accelerating Youth Economic Participation through Investment and Collaboration,” the Indaba highlighted youth entrepreneurship as a cornerstone of Gauteng’s future growth. Maile described the province’s youth as “the beating heart of the economy” and called for urgent, coordinated efforts to create lasting opportunities that extend beyond policy discussions.
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Investment in Gauteng’s Future
The Youth Investment Indaba forms part of the province’s broader plan to promote entrepreneurship and skills development. With youth unemployment still above 44%, the platform gave young innovators a rare opportunity to connect directly with investors, funders, and mentors.
“This is not just a conversation,” said Maile. “It’s a commitment to building an economy that includes everyone and leaves no young person behind.”
He credited the National Youth Development Agency (NYDA) for playing a pivotal role in financing and supporting youth-owned enterprises. Initiatives such as the Youth Challenge Fund and township enterprise programs have already started to spark economic activity in local communities.
A Province on the Move
The Indaba took place as Gauteng continues to reshape its developmental agenda to ensure that township and rural youth are integrated into the mainstream economy. Through the Gauteng Township Economic Development Act (TODA), the provincial government is formalizing and supporting small businesses that were once excluded from formal markets.
“We cannot measure progress only through GDP,” Maile said. “Real growth means seeing young people from Tembisa, Soweto, and Hammanskraal become employers, innovators, and investors in their own right.”
His comments drew applause from attendees, many of them representing youth-led businesses in sectors ranging from digital innovation to green energy. Their participation underscored how deeply the youth are invested in shaping their own economic destiny.
Building Pathways Through Partnership
Collaboration was one of the strongest themes throughout the Indaba. Maile emphasized that youth empowerment depends on a “whole-of-society” approach involving government, business, and civil society. He urged municipalities and local enterprises to work together to create pathways that make it easier for young entrepreneurs to access capital and markets.
For Maile, the Gauteng City Region model offers a blueprint for shared governance, aligning provincial priorities with municipal implementation. “Every partnership formed here today,” he said, “should lead to real contracts, real jobs, and real transformation.”
Youth Voices Take Center Stage
Beyond policy and funding announcements, the event gave young entrepreneurs a platform to share their lived experiences, from funding challenges to limited mentorship opportunities. Their stories revealed the importance of forums like the Indaba, where government, investors, and youth can engage directly.
For many, the gathering symbolized a bridge between ambition and opportunity. One tech entrepreneur from Ekurhuleni described it as “a chance to be seen and heard, not just trained and forgotten.”
Panel discussions explored youth procurement policies, innovation funding, digital transformation, and sustainable township development. Each conversation reinforced the message that progress must be practical, measurable, and inclusive.
Reimagining Youth Development
Maile’s address went beyond financial assistance. He urged young people to take charge of their growth through education, discipline, and creative thinking. “We can’t fund apathy; we must fund ambition,” he said. “Opportunity begins with mindset.”
He also called for education reform that aligns skills training with market demand, particularly in high-growth sectors such as renewable energy, ICT, and the creative industries. Partnerships with initiatives like the Gauteng City Region Academy (GCRA), the YES Program, and Harambee Youth Employment Accelerator continue to bridge the gap between learning and employment.

Why the Indaba Matters for Gauteng
Gauteng contributes nearly a third of South Africa’s GDP, making it the country’s economic engine. Yet high youth unemployment poses a serious threat to that position. The Youth Investment Indaba served as a reminder that no economy can sustain growth without investing in its next generation of workers and innovators.
The MEC’s message was clear: empowering the youth is not an act of charity, but a strategy for sustainable development.
The Indaba’s focus on linking policy to practical implementation demonstrated that Gauteng’s leadership recognizes the urgency of the moment. By connecting ambition with access and innovation with investment, the province is taking steps toward an economy that works for everyone.
A Shared Vision for the Future
One of the event’s key takeaways was the commitment to move beyond talk. Delegates agreed to form working groups focused on youth access to finance, mentorship pipelines, and township innovation hubs. The NYDA pledged continued support for youth-led enterprises and promised to collaborate with municipalities on targeted funding projects.
Maile closed his address with a firm reminder: “This is not about promises; it’s about progress.”
The Road Ahead
The true test will lie in implementation. Sustaining momentum requires transparency, accountability, and collaboration between government and youth stakeholders. Without consistent follow-through, initiatives risk fading into the background.
However, the energy and optimism in the room showed a new generation ready to take the lead. Gauteng’s young entrepreneurs are not waiting for change; they are building it. With government backing and private-sector partnerships, the province could soon become a continental model for youth-driven growth.
Driving the Next Chapter of Youth Empowerment in Gauteng
To Gauteng’s youth, the message is simple: participate. Register your business, seek mentorship, and tap into available funding through the NYDA, Gauteng Enterprise Propeller, and other development agencies. Join local forums that connect entrepreneurs with investors and policymakers.
Economic transformation begins when young people claim their space in it. The road ahead may be challenging, but the drive, creativity, and resilience already exist across the province.
The 2025 Youth Investment Indaba proved that Gauteng’s future is not something to wait for; it’s something to build together.



 


