Business Report Economy

A bridge to nowhere: South Africa’s real education crisis

PROSPER NATION

Nik Eberl|Published

Dr Nik Eberl is the founder and executive chair: The Future of Jobs Summit™ (Official T20 Side Event). He is also the author of Nation of Champions: How South Africa won the World Cup of Destination Branding).

Image: Supplied

More than 3.4 million young South Africans are not in employment, education or training. It is a sobering number — but it does not have to define us.

In fact, it may be the clearest signal yet that South Africa stands at a moment of redesign.

At a recent National Education Summit, Higher Education Minister Buti Manamela offered a powerful reframing: “The crisis is not necessarily only unemployment. It is a crisis of pathways.” That insight shifts the national conversation. Because if the challenge is pathways, then the opportunity is design.

South Africa does not start from zero.

It has institutions, programmes, talent and ambition. What it needs now is alignment — and a renewed focus on building visible, scalable pathways that connect learning to earning, and potential to participation.

Over the past three decades, the country has made significant progress in expanding access to education. But access alone is no longer enough. The next phase must be about outcomes — about ensuring that every young person can see, and step onto, a credible path into the economy.

From job seekers to job creators

Equally, the structure of the economy demands a mindset shift.

The formal sector, on its own, cannot absorb the scale of youth entering the labour market each year. Preparing young people exclusively for employment is no longer sufficient. South Africa must become intentional about producing job creators.

Encouragingly, this shift has already begun. Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges are introducing entrepreneurship into their programmes, exposing thousands of students to the fundamentals of starting a business.

But entrepreneurship cannot be taught in isolation. It must be enabled. Young entrepreneurs need access to funding, to markets, to procurement opportunities and to experienced mentors. When these elements come together, entrepreneurship moves from theory to traction — and from small ventures to scalable enterprises.

Where the jobs will come from

The question then becomes: where are the most credible opportunities for job creation?

Several sectors stand out — not as abstract possibilities, but as immediate engines of growth if aligned with the right skills and support:

  • Green economy and renewable energy: South Africa’s energy transition is not only an environmental imperative; it is a job creation opportunity. From solar installation and maintenance to grid innovation and battery technology, the green economy can absorb both technical and entrepreneurial talent at scale.
  • Agriculture and agro-processing: With the right investment in value chains, rural economies can be revitalised. Agro-processing, in particular, offers a powerful bridge between primary production and industrialisation, creating jobs across the spectrum from smallholder farming to export-oriented enterprises.
  • Digital economy and technology services: The rise of remote work and global digital platforms has lowered the barriers to entry for South African youth. Skills in software development, data analysis, digital marketing and platform-based services can connect local talent to global demand.
  • Infrastructure and construction: The country’s infrastructure backlog is well documented — and so is its potential as a job creator. Expanding artisan training and aligning it with large-scale infrastructure projects can unlock thousands of opportunities while addressing critical national needs.
  • Tourism and the experience economy: South Africa’s natural and cultural assets remain under-leveraged. With the right focus on safety, service excellence and entrepreneurial participation, tourism can once again become a major employer, particularly for youth and women.

These sectors share a common characteristic: they require both skills and systems. Training alone will not unlock their potential. Nor will policy in isolation. What is needed is coordinated execution.

From fragmentation to alignment

Minister Manamela’s observation that “our challenge is not lack of programmes but fragmentation” points to the heart of the issue.

South Africa does not lack ideas. It lacks integration. Education, industry and government often operate in parallel rather than in partnership. As a result, young people encounter a maze of opportunities that are difficult to navigate and even harder to translate into tangible outcomes.

The next phase of reform must focus on stitching these elements together into coherent pathways — clear journeys that a young person can follow from school, through training, into work or enterprise. This is not simply a policy challenge. It is a leadership challenge.

It requires business to step forward as co-creators of pathways, not just consumers of talent. It requires educational institutions to design with the end in mind. And it requires government to act as the integrator of the system, ensuring that incentives are aligned and outcomes are tracked.

A moment to build, together

On 28 May, South Africa’s Future of Jobs Summit will bring together leaders from across sectors to engage precisely on these questions. The opportunity is not to add another layer of programmes, but to accelerate alignment — to move from intention to implementation.

South Africa has done this before. At defining moments, the country has demonstrated an extraordinary ability to align around a shared goal and deliver against it. The challenge now is to apply that same collective focus to the question of youth pathways.

Because the stakes are clear — but so is the opportunity.

If South Africa can design and scale pathways that work, it will not only reduce unemployment. It will unlock a generation of builders, creators and contributors.

And in doing so, it will answer a far more important question: What does freedom look like when every young person can see a future — and step into it? 

Dr Nik Eberl is the founder and executive chair: The Future of Jobs Summit™ (Official T20 Side Event). He is also the author of Nation of Champions: How South Africa won the World Cup of Destination Branding).

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