Win an Entrepreneurship Mastery Programme bursary worth R19,900! Discover how the School of Entrepreneurship’s programme sets matriculants up for success in life and business by attending a free Taking a ‘Gap Year With Purpose’ webinar. One lucky attendant will win an Entrepreneurship Mastery Programme bursary when the webinar series ends. |
A few decades ago, graduating from high school used to be an assurance of having a decent job; one where you could earn a respectable living. With the turn of the 21st century, things have changed, as unemployment and poverty have continued to increase in South Africa, while the inequality gap has widened.
Presently, there are very few opportunities available for you as a school leaver with only a matric certificate in hand. Even with the latest minimum wage at R20.76 an hour, which many consider meagre, you would struggle to pull yourself out of poverty. The South African government attempted to address these challenges since 1994, with limited success.
Even if we include those who have gone further and obtained tertiary qualifications, Statistics South Africa says that a staggering 44.7% of youths (15-34 years old) were unemployed in the second quarter of 2020.
Graduate unemployment on the rise
In 2016, a graduate named Lindelani Madonsela resorted to advertising his CV at a busy traffic intersection in order to get employment. This was after five years of limited job hunting success, since having graduated from the University of Pretoria with a public management degree.
He had hoped to repay his grandmother who had funded his studies. Sadly, she passed away before he could do so. He ended up volunteering at his former high school while continuing to apply for jobs.
Lindelani is not the only one with this challenge. A Centre for Development and Enterprise report stated that 7.5 million young people were unemployed, and neither studying nor training in 2017. The main cause identified was substandard education and a lack of proper training.
In 2017, TimesLIVE reported on a University of Johannesburg engineering graduate, David Lekomanyane, who struggled to get a job after completing his degree in 2015. As the first one to graduate in his family, he had high hopes of lifting his family’s standard of living after spending about R200,000 on university fees.
Due to lack of experience, he was forced to volunteer at a mining company in order to obtain some of the required experience at the jobs he had been applying for. David ended up signing up for an R2,000 a month internship, with an outstanding balance of R32,000 in university fees hanging over his head.
An evolving environment
Certain futurists and researchers said that 2 billion jobs that exist today will not exist in 2030 and that 65% of children entering Grade 1 this year will assume careers that don’t yet exist. This signals a need to adapt and start to focus on creating new job opportunities.
The entrepreneurial drive in South Africa is very low in comparison to the rest of Africa. The latest South African Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) report found that only 10.1% of working South Africans wanted to start a business within three years. This is in comparison to 41.6% of people in other African countries in the survey.
Of concern is that this rate of entrepreneurial intention has been declining in South Africa during the past decade. In 2013 it stood at 15.4%, while in 2010 it was 19.6%.
Entrepreneurship as an alternative
With limited job opportunities available for graduates and non-graduates alike, starting your own business gives you the next best chance at survival and earning an income. Perhaps there is a need for us to help South Africa raise its entrepreneurial intention through innovation; sometimes you just need a nudge in the right direction.
We at the School of Entrepreneurship (attend a free Taking a ‘Gap Year With Purpose’ webinar to learn more and stand a chance to win a bursary: click here to register) could help you get empowered as an entrepreneur with access to various resources, through coaching, training and other avenues. Our main aim is to decrease the growing unemployment problem South Africa is currently facing. With our help, you can set up a business which becomes sustainable, profitable and competitive.
                                      Author Leon Lategan is The Entrepreneur Activist. He is the Founder & CEO of the School of Entrepreneurship where accomplished entrepreneurs set students up with the necessary knowledge, tools and skills needed to start an income-generating business within a year through their Entrepreneurship Mastery Programme, which is a more practical and affordable alternative to tertiary education. Stand a chance to win a bursary worth R19,900! Discover how the programme sets matriculants up for success in life and business by attending a free Taking a ‘Gap Year With Purpose’ webinar. One lucky attendant will win a bursary when the webinar series ends. |