Quick Overview #
Financial independence changes everything. It reduces stress, improves health outcomes, and gives you the freedom to build the life you want. Living with HIV does not limit your earning potential. It sharpens your motivation.
Why This Matters #
Financial instability is one of the biggest stressors for young people living with HIV. When you are worried about rent, food, or transport to your health facility, medication adherence and mental health both suffer. On the other hand, when you have stable income and financial skills, your entire life stabilizes around it.
Research consistently links economic empowerment to better health outcomes for people living with HIV, especially young women. It is not just about money. It is about agency, the ability to make decisions about your own life from a position of strength.
Skills Development #
Building marketable skills is the first step. Dream Village’s SOYEE (Skills and Opportunities for Youth Employment and Entrepreneurship) Hubs, in partnership with Plan International Rwanda, provide vocational training in practical trades. The first cohort in Bugesera trained 35 youth (60% girls, 40% boys) in welding, tailoring, and fashion design, with graduates receiving startup kits to launch their own businesses.
The Rwanda Nook Hub in Kicukiro has trained over 300 young people since 2019 in self-directed learning, covering skills from carpentry to electronics to entrepreneurship. These are not theoretical programs. They produce graduates who earn income.
Whether through formal vocational training or self-taught skills, the goal is the same: develop something you can offer the market and get paid for it.
Entrepreneurship Path #
Starting a business sounds intimidating, but it begins with a simple question: what problem can I solve for other people? Some practical business ideas that work in Rwanda include tailoring and clothing repair, food preparation and sales, mobile phone repair, agricultural products (vegetables, processed moringa, baked goods), beauty and hair services, and welding and metalwork.
Dream Village’s agriculture program produces moringa powder, tea, and oil, with production capacity at 500kg per season and growing toward 1,000kg. This is a real example of turning agricultural skills into sustainable income.
Financial Literacy #
Earning money is one thing. Managing it is another. Key financial skills include budgeting (tracking income and expenses each month), saving consistently (even small amounts add up), understanding the difference between needs and wants, avoiding predatory lending, and exploring savings groups and cooperatives.
Financial literacy is integrated into Dream Village’s empowerment programming because it is the bridge between earning income and building lasting stability.
Work-Life-Health Balance #
When you are building a career or business, it is tempting to push health to the background. Resist that. Your earning capacity depends on your health. Keep your medication routine consistent. Attend your scheduled appointments. Manage stress through exercise, rest, and peer support. A healthy entrepreneur is a productive entrepreneur.
Key Takeaways #
- Economic empowerment reduces stress, improves health outcomes, and gives you real choices in life.
- Dream Village’s SOYEE and Nook Hub programs provide practical, marketable skills and startup support.
- Financial literacy, consistent saving, and work-life-health balance turn income into lasting independence.
Need Support? #
Whether you are ready for vocational training or interested in starting a business, Dream Village has a path for you.
Join SOYEE vocational training