Cote d’Ivoire leads Africa on youth jobs

AFRICA’S  fast-growing youth population is often described as a double-edged sword: a potential engine of economic growth or a ticking time bomb if jobs fail to keep pace. With more than 60 per cent of Africans under the age of 25, governments face immense pressure to create opportunities for young people.

Across the continent, the record is sobering. In Senegal, more than 30 per cent of young people are not in employment, education or training. Ghana performs slightly better, yet one in five of its youth remain unemployed. South Africa holds the world’s highest youth unemployment rate at nearly 60 per cent. North African states such as Tunisia and Egypt struggle with rates around 30 per cent, particularly among university graduates. Even in East Africa, where Kenya and Ethiopia record strong growth, young people are largely trapped in low-productivity informal work.

A striking exception

Against this bleak backdrop, Cote d’Ivoire has emerged as an exception. Official figures show youth unemployment at just under four per cent in 2024 – far below the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) average of 25 per cent.

Analysts point to the country’s political stability and deliberate policy choices. Mamadou Touré, Minister for Youth Promotion, Vocational Training and Civic Service, has repeatedly argued that Africa’s demographic dividend will remain a mirage unless governments invest heavily in human capital.

‘We need to invest massively in training,’ Touré told reporters, underscoring the government’s efforts to align education, vocational skills and labour market demand.

Flagship youth programme

This philosophy drives the Programme Jeunesse du Gouvernement (PJGouv), Cote d’Ivoire’s flagship youth initiative. Launched under Touré’s leadership, the programme commands a budget of over 1,100bn CFA francs and aims to train, employ and empower 1.5 million young Ivorians.

Its interventions span vocational training, entrepreneurship support, civic engagement and the construction of new youth facilities. Crucially, PJGouv is not confined to a single ministry but coordinated across 25 government departments.

In its first year, the scheme exceeded expectations. While the target was to reach 700,000 young people, PJGouv delivered jobs, training and project funding to more than one million.

A model for the continent?

Observers say Cote d’Ivoire’s approach could offer lessons for other African nations grappling with youth unemployment. An Ivorian academic based in London told Africa Briefing that training remained the decisive factor.

‘By investing in training, aligning education with market needs and maintaining political stability, Cote d’Ivoire has shown that the youth bulge can be turned from a looming crisis into a genuine demographic dividend,’ he said.

The academic stressed that education was central to the challenge. According to UNESCO data, around 98 million children and young people aged between six and 18 in sub-Saharan Africa are out of school.

‘These are the people the government of Cote d’Ivoire is targeting,’ he added.

Regional urgency

The scale of the problem elsewhere is stark. South Africa’s crisis of nearly 60 per cent youth unemployment threatens long-term stability, while Tunisia and Egypt face waves of disillusioned graduates unable to find work. Even in high-growth economies like Kenya, youth often find themselves locked into precarious informal livelihoods.

Cote d’Ivoire’s results suggest a different path is possible when political commitment, stable governance and targeted investment converge. As Africa’s population continues to expand, with millions of young people entering the labour force every year, the stakes could not be higher.

For now, Cote d’Ivoire has provided proof that with the right mix of vision and resources, the youth bulge can be transformed from a burden into an opportunity.