 I am David Tinashe Nyagueta. I'm 23 years old. I'm from Nelson Mandela University and I'm doing masters in economics research. I think the SETI program would actually help me as a researcher in developing my skills, in applying them in Africa where we face culpable problems of unemployment, issues of gender-based violence and all other issues that we face as a developing continent. As we have seen in the past, it's clear that historic models in economics have failed to actually fix the issues that we face in South Africa. So I think SETI brings young people and new ways of thinking in economics to fix the issues that are actually currently happening. My research tries to find out are there assumed perspectives that say that immigrants cause unemployment of citizens of South Africa and also that immigrants are actually depleting the growth of South Africa and then it tries to actually bring facts forward on whether these assumptions are true and then if they are true or false, how can the government and civil society try to fix these issues without any need for violent confrontation between immigrants and current SETI. I would like to see more people do research and actually contributing to the facts rather than opinion in fixing issues that affect us today. So I see myself as a research in a university or some kind of think tank that will actually produce research for the government to implement different policies, especially that is to tackle issues such as inequality, immigration, gender-based violence and all those issues that many economists actually run away from. One of the reasons I did this research was that I'm also an immigrant and I feel like I am contributing to South Africa.