A Jobless Nation
38%
Unemployment Rate
Jobless Crisis: 2.6 Million Dreams Crushed
The Devastating Numbers
- September 2022 (Ruto takes office): Official unemployment rate at 5.7%
- April 2024: Unemployment rate soared to 9.3%
- Youth unemployment (ages 18-34): Increased from 32.7% to 39.1%
- Net job losses: Approximately 2.6 million jobs eliminated
The Collapsed Promises
- Promise: Ksh 50 billion annual “Hustler Fund” to create 5 million small businesses
- Reality: Only Ksh 6 billion allocated, with 60% default rate and fewer than 200,000 sustainable businesses created
- Promise: Digital jobs program to employ 1 million youth in online work
- Reality: Only 17,000 placements achieved, with program funding diverted to other initiatives
- Promise: Manufacturing revival to create 1 million industrial jobs
- Reality: Manufacturing sector contracted by 3.7%, with 74 major factories closing operations
The Public Sector Betrayal
- Civil service: 14,700 positions eliminated through “voluntary” early retirement
- Teachers: Promised 116,000 new positions, only 20,000 actually hired
- Healthcare workers: 7,200 contract workers terminated
- County government employees: 23,000 positions eliminated due to reduced county allocations
The Private Sector Collapse
- Retail sector: 42,000 jobs lost as major retailers downsize or close
- Manufacturing: 87,000 industrial jobs eliminated
- Banking: 5,300 jobs cut as banks accelerate digitization
- Agriculture: 1.2 million farm jobs lost due to policy failures and climate challenges
The SME Extinction
- SME closures: Over 61,000 registered small businesses shut down since September 2022
- Informal sector contraction: 17% reduction in jua kali (informal) businesses
- SME loan defaults: Increased by 43%, leading to asset seizures
- New business registrations: Declined by 61% compared to pre-Ruto period
The Youth Betrayal
- University graduates unemployment: Increased from 41% to 56%
- Technical college graduates unemployment: Rose from 32% to 47%
- Youth-owned businesses: 43% closed within 18 months of Ruto taking office
- Internship opportunities: Government internship program funding cut by 73%
The Regional Disparity
- Coast region: 23.7% unemployment (highest in the country)
- Western Kenya: 19.3% unemployment
- Nairobi: 17.8% unemployment
- Central Kenya: 11.2% unemployment (lowest, but still nearly doubled from 2022)
The Sectoral Collapse
- Construction: 37% contraction following the collapse of affordable housing program
- Tourism: 23% job reduction due to security concerns and global economic factors
- Transport: 19% job losses following fuel price increases and vehicle import taxes
- Agriculture: 14% employment reduction due to failed subsidy programs and climate challenges
The Skills Mismatch Excuse
- January 2023: Launched Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC) reforms
- Promised outcome: Education system aligned with job market needs
- Reality: Ksh 18 billion spent on consultants and conferences
- Impact on employment: Zero measurable improvement
The Wage Depression
- Average real wages: Decreased by 17% when adjusted for inflation
- Minimum wage: Despite a nominal 12% increase, real value declined by 9%
- Informal sector earnings: Decreased by 23% in real terms
- Public sector wage freeze: Implemented despite 15% inflation
Sources:
This article draws from multiple sources including: Kenya National Bureau of Statistics Quarterly Labor Force Reports (2022-2024); Central Bank of Kenya Economic Reviews; Federation of Kenya Employers Annual Employment Trends Survey; Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry Business Environment Reports; Parliamentary Budget Office Analysis of Public Sector Employment; Institute of Economic Affairs Kenya Economic Reports; Central Organization of Trade Unions (COTU) Wage Analysis Studies; Youth Enterprise Development Fund Surveys; Kenya Association of Manufacturers Annual Industrial Survey; World Bank Kenya Jobs Diagnostic Report (March 2024); International Labour Organization Country Assessment for Kenya; and media investigations by Business Daily, The Standard, and Reuters on specific job loss incidents across various sectors between September 2022 and April 2024.
