Africa
Certificate Without Opportunity: The Pain of Nigeria’s Graduates -By Abdulazeez Toheeb Olawale
Still, Nigerian youths refuse to give up.
From tech startups to tailoring shops, from freelance writing to mini-importation, they build something out of nothing.
They learn, adapt, and innovate — not because the system supports them, but because survival demands it.
Every year, Nigerian universities release thousands of bright minds into a labour market that has long stopped expanding. Between the dream of success and the reality of survival, a generation is slowly losing faith in education itself.
At 27, Adewale still keeps his NYSC certificate neatly laminated in a brown file. He looks at it sometimes, the way one looks at an old photograph — with both pride and pain. Four years after completing his service, the Economics graduate now sells phone accessories under a small umbrella in Ojota, Lagos.
“Education was supposed to open doors,” he says softly. “But all I see are walls.”
He is not alone. Across Nigeria, thousands of graduates share the same frustration — intelligent, hardworking, and jobless. Their certificates gleam, but their futures remain dim.
A Generation Waiting for Opportunity
From Ibadan to Sokoto, from Zaria to Port Harcourt, young Nigerians roam the streets with hope fading fast. They attend endless interviews, submit countless applications, and refresh job portals that rarely open for them.
According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), more than 53% of Nigerian youths are unemployed or underemployed — a figure that tells the story of wasted potential and unfulfilled dreams.
Many have turned to survival hustles — driving Keke, selling thrift clothes online, or doing menial jobs far below their qualifications.
As one graduate in Abuja said, “My degree is now like decoration — I frame it on the wall while I hustle on the street.”
The Broken Promise of Education
For decades, parents were told education was the surest route out of poverty. They sold land, borrowed money, and prayed their children would “make it.” But that faith is fading.
Today, many graduates are beginning to question the very foundation of that belief.
“What’s the point of studying so hard,” one graduate asked, “when connections matter more than competence?”
Some have slipped into depression; others have chosen migration — the “Japa” dream, a silent protest against a country that no longer rewards effort.
Every convocation is still filled with gowns, smiles, and cameras — yet beneath the joy lies a quiet question: what next?
ASUU Strike: A Cycle of Disruption and Despair
Even before they graduate, the system frustrates Nigerian students. The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), currently on a warning strike, has once again disrupted the smooth running of academic activities nationwide.
For students, it feels like a recurring nightmare — a cycle of strike, suspension, resumption, and another strike. A four-year course easily stretches into six or seven years.
These constant disruptions don’t just waste time; they crush motivation and delay futures.
Many students spend idle months at home, doing nothing, watching their dreams gather dust.
“I’ve lost count of how many times ASUU has gone on strike,” said a 400-level student of the University of Ilorin. “We resume, then we stop again. I’m tired — it’s like we’re moving but not going anywhere.”
The endless face-off between government and lecturers has made public universities unpredictable and unstable. By the time students graduate, they are already behind in a system that’s running late — with little energy left to face a job market that’s already shutting its doors.
Employers’ Excuse: ‘No Experience’
Ironically, most job postings demand 2–5 years of experience, leaving fresh graduates stranded before they even start.
It’s a cruel circle — no job without experience, and no experience without a job.
Many end up in unpaid internships that exploit their labour and crush their confidence.
A young lady in Ilorin shared her ordeal:
“I worked for six months without pay, hoping they’d retain me. When they didn’t, I realized I was just cheap labour.”
The promise of “experience” becomes another trap, leaving graduates overworked, underpaid, and disillusioned.
Government’s Silence, Youths’ Strength
While government after government promises job creation, the ground reality tells a different story. Policies exist on paper, empowerment schemes make headlines, but their impact rarely reaches the streets.
Still, Nigerian youths refuse to give up.
From tech startups to tailoring shops, from freelance writing to mini-importation, they build something out of nothing.
They learn, adapt, and innovate — not because the system supports them, but because survival demands it.
But not everyone can self-employ. A nation that cannot absorb its graduates risks losing its brightest minds — not to laziness, but to frustration and despair.
When Education Stops Being the Key
In a corner of his small kiosk, Adewale opens his brown file again — his B.Sc certificate, his NYSC discharge, his application letters. He looks up and sighs.
“Maybe one day, this country will remember people like us,” he says, “the ones who didn’t fail — but were failed.”
Education was meant to be the key. But for millions of Nigerian youths, the lock has changed.
Until the nation begins to match learning with opportunity, certificates will remain symbols of effort without reward — paper dreams in a harsh reality.
Author’s Note:
Abdulazeez Toheeb Olawale is a Nigerian journalist who writes about national issues, economy, and human stories. He can be reached via toheebazeez200@gmail.com