Connect with us

Africa

Nigeria’s Skills Deficit: Time To Close The Gap Between Graduates And The Labour Market -By Moses Emani Salami

Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, WTO Director-General, has also highlighted that for Africa to compete globally, our focus must shift from paper qualifications to practical skills development, digital literacy, and technical competencies.

Published

on

Youths

Nigeria today stands at a dangerous crossroads. Every year, thousands of graduates leave our universities and polytechnics with certificates in hand, yet the majority of them remain unemployable. Why? Because the labour market does not want mere certificates—it wants skills, competence, and certification that proves real-world ability.

As Prof. Idris Bugaje, Executive Secretary of NBTE, has repeatedly said: “What Nigeria needs today is skills, not degrees.” This truth became glaring when Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, was building his multi-billion-dollar refinery. Despite Nigeria’s army of graduates, the project imported thousands of skilled workers from India, Pakistan, and China because our local graduates simply lacked the right skills and internationally recognized certifications to do the job.

This reality is painful, but it is also a wake-up call.

The Growing Skills Gap

The mismatch between graduate profiles and labour market needs has become one of Nigeria’s biggest development bottlenecks. According to the World Bank and several think-tank reports, employers consistently lament that Nigerian graduates are not job-ready. They often lack problem-solving capacity, technical know-how, creativity, and the soft skills required for 21st-century industries.

Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, WTO Director-General, has also highlighted that for Africa to compete globally, our focus must shift from paper qualifications to practical skills development, digital literacy, and technical competencies.

Bridging the Divide

Encouragingly, the Federal Ministry of Education has introduced the TVET (Technical and Vocational Education and Training) Initiative, aimed at equipping young Nigerians with market-relevant skills. In line with this, the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) has mandated all institutions under its purview to integrate Mandatory Skills Qualifications (MSQ) into their academic programmes. This means that graduates will leave not just with a National Diploma (ND) or Higher National Diploma (HND), but with an employable skill and certification to match.

However, for this vision to succeed, NBTE must be heavily funded and supported by government. As the regulatory body overseeing polytechnics, monotechnics, and technical colleges, NBTE holds the key to repositioning Nigeria’s workforce. Without strong financial backing, the dream of a skills-driven economy will remain rhetoric.

A Call to Action

Nigeria cannot afford to keep producing graduates who swell the ranks of the unemployed. We cannot keep watching multinationals bypass our youths for foreign workers. We cannot keep ignoring the fact that our graduates lack the right skills and the right certifications.

What we need now is urgent action:

1. Fund NBTE adequately to scale up TVET nationwide.

2. Make MSQ compulsory in all tertiary institutions.

3. Link training with industry demands so that graduates are employable from day one.

4. Re-orient our national mindset to value skills as much as, if not more than, degrees.

As Prof. Bugaje rightly insists, “Skills, not degrees, will drive Nigeria’s future.” The time to act is now. If we don’t, Nigeria’s youth will continue to be left behind while other nations move forward with skilled, productive, and competitive workforces.


Moses Emani Salami
National Board for Technical Education, South-South Zonal Office Auchi
08153393152, 08067188389
Follow on twitter @emanisalams; Facebook: Moses Emani Salami

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Gabriel-Agbo-Africans-Angle Gabriel-Agbo-Africans-Angle
Africa5 hours ago

God Cannot Lie -By Gabriel Agbo

He made him rich, famous and very powerful, just as he promised. What do you want to say about the...

Festus Adedayo Festus Adedayo
Africa22 hours ago

Aso Rock and Kitoye Ajasa’s Lickspittle Press -By Festus Adedayo

The only way the Nigerian media can play its rightful role in the success of democracy, especially the success of...

SOLDIER AND WIKE SOLDIER AND WIKE
Africa1 day ago

On the Matter of Wike and Yerima: A Respectful Rejoinder to Professor Sebastine Hon, SAN -By Vitus Ozoke, PhD

And in a democracy governed by law, common sense must never be treated as a crime. In a constitutional democracy,...

Abiodun Komolafe Abiodun Komolafe
Africa1 day ago

Ijebu-Jesa Grammar School at 70! (2) -By Abiodun KOMOLAFE

As I have argued earlier, IJGS’s alumni commitment is demonstrated through various renovation projects. I stand by it! For instance,...

Nyesom-Wike-FCT-minister- Nyesom-Wike-FCT-minister-
Africa2 days ago

Wike’s Backlash And The PR Lesson He Can’t Afford To Ignore -By Isaac Asabor

As Edward Bernays warned decades ago, “You can’t hide facts that are visible to everyone; you can only adjust perception...

Wike and YERIMA Wike and YERIMA
Africa2 days ago

Lt. Yarima vs Minister Wike: A Romantic Analysis -By Abdulkadir Salaudeen

One most important lesson is that our rulers in Nigeria should adopt a new matrix for decent behavior. It is...

Tinubu and Wike Tinubu and Wike
Africa2 days ago

The Last Straw for President Tinubu: Why the Wike–Yerima Armed Confrontation Demands a Psychological Wellness Leave Before Nigeria Slips Into a Jungle -By Professor John Egbeazien Oshodi

This is not about declaring him “mad” or unfit in a stigmatizing way. It is about recognizing that leadership, especially...

quality-nigerian-flag-for-sale-in-lagos quality-nigerian-flag-for-sale-in-lagos
Africa3 days ago

Why Nigeria Must Stop Turning Courts Into Weapons and Let the PDP Convention Hold -By Prof. John Egbeazien Oshodi

Nigeria is standing before a mirror it cannot avoid. The PDP convention in Ibadan is no longer a small internal...

Tinubu Tinubu
Africa3 days ago

FG’s Suspension of 15% Fuel Import Duty: A Holistic Step Toward Economic Relief and Market Stability -By Blaise Udunze

A humane reform process ensures that no policy, however noble, becomes a burden too heavy for its people to bear....

Forgotten Dairies3 days ago

Debate: Yerima Deserves Apology, Not Wike -By Isaac Asabor

When soldiers abuse power, we rightly condemn them. When politicians do the same, we excuse them, and that double standard...