The Head of the State House Investors Protection Unit (SHIPU), Col. Edith Nakalema has rallied academicians to find lasting solutions to the recurring burden of youth unemployment in Uganda.
According to Col. Nakalema, the rampant unemployment rate in Uganda exacerbated by corruption levels and the failure for the youth to access policy makers, needs concerted efforts of all stakeholders to find both short-term and long-term solutions to tame the likely outcomes.
“When these young people tell us that we are not giving them attention, it is a genuine concern because they now kind of own the country given that they are the majority and it is our duty to ensure that what they are putting to us is addressed,” Col. Nakalema said, while quoting the 2024 preliminary Population Census results which indicated that the youths (0-35 years) in Uganda constitute 82% of the 45.9 million people.
The SHIPU head made the remarks on Wednesday 18th September, 2024 during a meeting with academicians and other leaders at the unit’s offices in Kampala.
The meeting was aimed at discussing and sharing solutions to youth unemployment, a challenge the country continues to deal with.
The academicians included the Vice Chancellor Kyambogo University. Prof. Elly Katunguka, the Director General Uganda Management Institute, Dr. James Nkata, the Dean, School of Management Science, Uganda Management Institute, Prof. Gerald Kagambirwe Karyeija, Ms. Stella Kyohairwe, a lecturer at Uganda Management Institute, Mr. Adrian Bainebyabo also from Uganda Management Institute and Hon. Fred Ruhindi who is the Pro Bono legal advisor at the State House Investors Protection Unit.
“Several factors affect youth unemployment in Uganda, including poor access to quality education and training, a skills gap between job seekers and open positions, a dearth of formal jobs relative to the number of young people entering the labour force and the dominance of the informal sector,” Col. Nakalema noted, adding that whereas the government has spearheaded several interventions to tackle the unemployment challenge such as the Presidential skilling program, the Youth Livelihood Program (YLP), Skilling Uganda, Uganda Youth Venture Capital Fund (VYVCF), Youth Apprenticeship and Skills Development Program, National Enterprise Development Program (NEDP) and the Youth Entrepreneurship Program (YEP) among many others, the problem still persists.
“And the level of disgruntlement against the government is deepening and it is our big concern now. However, the challenge we are facing needs your minds, the researchers and leaders of top academic institutions,” she said.
The meeting was intended to among other key fundamental strategies; reflect on the strategies to expand the job creation capacity in Uganda’s economy, the capacity building priorities of education/training institutions in order to effectively tackle youth unemployment and how to effectively nurture the increasingly non-negotiable soft skills and align the competencies of young people with the demands of the world of work today.
Col. Nakalema further informed the meeting that proposals from other stakeholders including Makerere University to enhance government efforts in tackling the unemployment challenge have already been forwarded to the President.
Among the proposals was to mobilise the youths into categories; the literate/skilled and unemployed and the second category of illiterate/unskilled and unemployed who seem to be a dangerous group.
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