“Three-quarters of youth in Tanzania are working or looking for a job” MAIL & GUARDIAN REPORT
By The Citizen Reporter
Posted Tuesday, August 19 2014 at 07:56
Posted Tuesday, August 19 2014 at 07:56
In Summary
- Along with jobs, a subject that also gains prominence among youth was sex, as Africa’s young people make the transition from childhood to adulthood
- SURVEY: A study among young men and women in Tanzania, sub-Saharan Africa reveals key burning issues
Jobs, sex and money top the list of what African youth, including Tanzanian, want most, according to a report published by the Mail & Guardian Africa.
Data from the Population Reference Bureau status
report shows that 10 million young Africans join the labour market every
year and by 2040, the continent’s working-age population will be the
largest in the world.
Tanzania, according to the 2012 national census,
has 15.3 million youth aged between 18 and 40, or 33 per cent of the
country’s population of 45 million people. Data from the National Bureau
of Statistics (NBS) shows that 9.6 million youth aged from 18 to 40
live in rural areas, while 5.7 million are in urban areas.
However, the employment profile report compiled by
NBS in 2012 shows that there were only 1.55 million people employed in
the formal sector, with 64 per cent and 36 per cent working in the
private and public sectors, respectively.
The total annual earnings per employee was an
average of Sh8.8 million ($5,000) in 2012 whereby the monthly average
earnings for employees in the public sector was Sh671,000 ($400), about
twice the monthly average earnings in the private sector, which stood at
Sh307,000 ($200).
The total wage bill for both the public and private sectors in 2012 was Sh8.8 trillion ($5.2 billion), according to NBS data.
The survey further revealed that there were
126,073 existing job opportunities in 2012, whereby technician and
associate professionals had the largest number of vacancies, which was
60.5 per cent in the formal sector, while professionals were second with
18.4 per cent, followed by service workers and shopkeepers at 7.5 per
cent.
To put things into simple perspective, the total
number of employees in Tanzania in both the private and public sectors
in 2012 was equivalent to just 10 per cent of the number of youth aged
between 18 and 40.
On average, youth start working at the age of 25, depending on the time spent in primary and tertiary education.
Now, according to the Mail & Guardian Africa,
10 million youth enter the job market annually in Africa. Education is
vital to ensuring Africa’s youth accumulate skills to enter the job
market and start an independent livelihood.
Over the last two decades, Africa has seen rapid
progress towards universal primary education, with nearly all countries
having implemented policies to ensure free access. But as more children
are completing primary school, the demand for secondary schools is
growing.
Alhough the African average shows that
approximately only half of its youth will be enrolled in secondary
school (44 per cent female, 51 per cent male), countries like Ghana,
Swaziland, Cape Verde, Botswana and the Seychelles have more than 90 per
cent of both boys and girls. But, what are the most burning issues for
our youth? According to the study, sex, jobs and money were the top
issues in the minds of millions of youth in Tanzania and elsewhere
around Africa.
But many African youth are not making it to school, leaving them trapped in a cycle of poverty and with fewer opportunities.
Approximately 38 per cent of girls and 35 per cent
of boys are out of school in Africa, the highest in the world. While
Niger presents the worst case scenario with 78 per cent of youth out of
school, Botswana, South Africa, the Seychelles and Kenya stand out as
notable exceptions, with less than 5 per cent of all adolescents out of
school.
However, the good news is that today’s young people in sub-Saharan Africa are the best-educated generation ever.
The increased access to education has given them
the skills to be effective in the labour force, but it also presents a
significant threat to political stability if there are not enough jobs
to go around.
Between 2000 and 2008, Africa’s working-age
population increased by 25 per cent from 443 million to 550 million. If
these trends continue, by 2040 the continent’s working-age population
will be the largest in the world at 1 billion. International Labour
Organization (ILO) estimates that although 73 million new jobs were
created in sub-Saharan Africa between 2000 and 2008, only a fifth of
those jobs went to young people.
The report further states that the countries that
are best dealing with this—and those that are lagging— are surprising.
More than three-quarters of all youth aged 15 to 24 in Ethiopia, Burkina
Faso, Eritrea and Tanzania are working or looking for a job. This is
compared to South Africa that has a youth labour force participation
rate of only 25 per cent while Algeria was the big shocker on the
continent with only 9 per cent of its female youth participating in the
labour force.
Along with jobs, a subject that also gains
prominence among youth was sex, as Africa’s young people make the
transition from childhood to adulthood, entering their reproductive
years.
This makes it important for the youth to have
access to sexual and reproductive health information and services so
they can use contraception, prevent unintended pregnancy and decide if
and when to have children.
The average adolescent fertility rate is 91 out of
1,000 women aged between 15 and 19 years–the highest in the world
although there were large disparities between countries. For example,
Libya had two whilst Niger had 192.
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