Dominic Omondi
Close to half a million Kenyans 'tarmacked' for more than a year without getting a job, a new labour report has shown.
The quarterly labour report from the Kenya National Bureau of
Statistics (KNBS) shows that
another 600,000 Kenyans were forced to work
in low-paying or low-skilled jobs after being jobless for a long while.
In total, there were about 929,595 unemployed Kenyans between October
and December last year, which in strict terms means that they did not
have a job but had actively been looking for one in the past four weeks
before the survey was conducted.
According to the report, the national unemployment rate stood at 4.9 per
cent in the fourth quarter of last year compared to 5.3 per cent in the
third quarter.
SEE ALSO :End of an era for manual jobs as economy rewards skilled workers
The
unemployment rate is, however, radically different from what the
national statistician gave in its 2019 census report, which showed that
11.6 per cent of economically active Kenyans, or 2.6 million people,
were actively looking for work.
“The results show that the economically active population was 22.3
million, comprising the working (19.7 million) and those seeking work
(2.6 million),” read part of the census report for 2019.
The quarterly labour report also showed that there were more than eight
million working-age citizens who were neither working nor actively
looking for work, and were thus left out of labour force participation.
This included 2.6 million Kenyans aged between 25 and 64. Some of these
people might have given up on job-hunts, while others might have been
sick, students or early retirees.
This is the first time the national statistician is releasing the report, which will now be published every two quarters.
SEE ALSO :Report: Most students shun technical subjects
Pages
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
No comments :
Post a Comment