Institute of Development Studies
Bio
Author Biography
Seife Ayele is a development economist with over 20 years’ experience in research, teaching, and development practice, mainly in Africa and Asia. His work focuses on agricultural innovations and development, technology access and adoption, youth employment, and enterprise development. He is currently a Fellow in the Business, Markets and the State Cluster at IDS. Prior to joining IDS, he directed programmes in Ethiopia promoting access to and adoption of improved agricultural technologies by smallholder farmers. He was a Research Scientist at the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), Nairobi, and a Research Fellow at the Open University, UK.
Institute of Development Studies
Bio
Author Biography
Dominic Glover is an IDS Fellow at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK and a member of the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Social, Technological, and Environmental Pathways to Sustainability (STEPS) Centre. He is an interdisciplinary social scientist working in international development studies, using conceptual frameworks and methodological approaches drawn from science, technology, and society studies; geography; sociology; and anthropology. Dominic has over 18 years’ experience in research, teaching, and communication, with a focus on technology and agrarian change in small‑scale farming systems in low- and middle-income countries including India, the Philippines, Madagascar, Nepal, Kenya, and Ethiopia.
Institute of Development Studies
Bio
Author Biography
Marjoke Oosterom (PhD) is a Research Fellow at IDS, and has a background in comparative politics and development studies. Her research concentrates on the effects of experiences of conflict, violence, and displacement on citizenship and agency, with a specific focus on youth. Within the IDS Youth Employment and Politics theme, her research has focused on the politics of the informal economy and youth employment interventions, in east and southern Africa. Marjoke is involved in advisory services for policymakers and international NGOs working on governance and citizen participation, youth politics and security, and civic space.
Volume 49
Number 5
Published: November 27, 2018
Globally, governments, development agencies, and inter-governmental institutions have invested heavily in skills-building interventions seeking to enhance the employability of youths. However, policy actors are becoming more aware of the shortcomings of skills-building interventions, and attention is shifting to focus on how to promote productivity, boost the private sector, and generate the kind of growth that could create jobs. While policymakers have endorsed the role of the private sector as a job generator, it remains unclear whether, and under what conditions, the formal private sector generates enough and decent jobs. Empirical research on youth employment in the private sector is sparse. This IDS Bulletin begins to fill that gap. The articles here have been authored by young African scholars from the Matasa Fellows Network, convened by the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) in collaboration with Mastercard Foundation. These early-career academics from Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Uganda, and Zimbabwe were selected to consider the role that could be played by the formal private sector in job creation in Africa. Case studies come from their respective countries. While some aspects of the youth employment challenge are common to all six countries, the local contexts and situations are unique and sectoral. This IDS Bulletin explores the scope of research and policy challenges in three specific areas: agribusiness and youth employment; skills gaps and youth employability; and youth employment in fragile and conflict-affected settings. The articles demonstrate the importance of effective policy measures to ensure that private sector growth creates sufficient numbers of decent, secure jobs to provide employment to African youth.