From left: Federation of Kenya Employers (FKE) national president Mark
Obuya, International Organisation of Employers president Erol Kireseoi,
FKE executive director Jacqueline Mugo during the Enterprise Forum on
Entrepreneurship and Employment Creation at Radisson Blu Hotel in
Nairobi on March 5, 2018. photo | salaton njau
Infrastructure-led economic growth strategy has failed to
generate sustainable jobs for the youth in the last decade, an
employers’ lobby says.
Federation of Kenya Employers
executive director Jacqueline Mugo instead backs investment in
labour-intensive sectors such as agribusiness, manufacturing and
technology to gradually reverse growing youth unemployment.
“Infrastructure
development, though good, does not at the end of the day lead to growth
in jobs. If you look at the huge SGR (standard gauge railway) project
that Kenya has implemented…, it has not actually absorbed many Kenyans
into employment,” she told journalists in Nairobi on Monday.
“What employers are saying is that we have to look at sectors which are likely to help us create jobs that we need.”
Kenya’s economy expanded by an average of 5.7 per cent in four
years through 2016, but growth in new decent jobs averaged 4.3 per cent,
hugely underperforming the one million a year target.
New jobs in the formal sector dropped to 76,300 in 2016 from 107,800 in 2015 and 27,300 in 2013.
Kenya
has the highest rate of youth joblessness in East Africa, according to
the World Bank, with 17 per cent of all young people eligible for work
lacking jobs.
Neighbouring Tanzania and Uganda have comparable rates of 5.5 and 6.8 per cent, respectively.
Ms
Mugo spoke on the sidelines of a three-day forum on creating an
enabling business environment for job creation, graced by International
Organisation of Employers president Erol Kiresepi and attended employer
federations from 30 African countries.
President Uhuru
Kenyatta has signalled a shift in economic growth policy by slowing down
heavy spend on infrastructure development in favour of four new
priority sectors — the ‘Big Four’ policy agenda. These are
manufacturing, food security, low-cost housing and universal healthcare.
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