Unless Uganda’s economy grows faster than its current pace, the
country will find itself with a crisis of more workers than jobs.
According
to a new World Bank report released on Tuesday, Uganda has had more
than 300,000 additional workers enter the job market annually between
1992 and 2014, and the number is set to rise to over one million between
2030 and 2041 annually.
The report,
“Uganda: Jobs strategy for inclusive growth,” says that with the
country’s growing population, an economic transformation that will
create jobs creation requires a faster urbanisation with
industrialisation, which should begin with the development of commercial
agriculture.
The country’s
agricultural sector employs nearly 82 per cent of the workforce and
accounts for around 80 per cent of the annual export earnings.
Three-quarters
of the unprecedented number of young Ugandans entering the labour
market work in agriculture where productivity growth is negligible,
translating into slow economic transformation.
The
country’s prevailing economic growth is no longer high enough to create
more and better jobs for its population for the next 21 years, and the
World Bank report says the country’s GDP increased by nearly an average
of seven per cent between 2000 and 2012. However, the growth has been
slowing down since 2006, dipping below five per cent in 2016, when the
bank last collected household data.
The economy however reported strong growth in
2019, estimated at 6.3 per cent, largely driven by the expansion of
services and industrial growth driven by construction and mining.
However, the real problem lies in the economic slowdown across main
economic sectors and in all former growth drivers.
Over
the time covered, the report notes the deteriorating quality of jobs
characterised by spatial inequalities, a slow urbanisation process and a
low demand for wage workers in the private sector.
“Wage
job opportunities depend on having a dynamic private formal sector that
is expanding and therefore hiring workers. Large firms are often in a
position to provide more productive employment,” the report says.
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