Daily Dispatch

Are internship­s the way to address unemployme­nt?

- Willie Chinyamuri­ndi Willie Tafadzwa Chinyamuri­ndi is a professor at the University of Fort Hare and head of the department of business management. He writes in his personal capacity

We close Youth Month on a sad note.

Twenty-one young people lost their lives at the Enyobeni tavern in East London.

Events like this remind us how at risk our young people are, often from themselves.

The unbridled war of our times, the need to keep a watch and help especially young people in the times we are living in. The outlook is not so good, despite the rallying cry for intensifyi­ng concerted efforts to assist young people.

The latest Quarterly Labour Force Survey from Stats SA shows an increase in youth unemployme­nt.

So unstable is the situation that oscillatio­ns are evident.

For instancefi­gures from the Eastern Cape Socio-economic Consultati­ve Council Quarterly Labour Force Survey reveal a noted decrease to 45% in terms of the unemployme­nt rate in the province.

Yet the national tally in terms of the youth unemployme­nt rate is soaring. Among the youth cohort from ages 25-34, more than 40% of these young people are unemployed.

Concerning is the 63.9% unemployme­nt rate for the cohort aged 25-34.

At the summit of this age group are the products of higher education institutio­ns in graduates at 32.6%.

All this is described as our job bloodbath.

One noted effort in addressing the youth unemployme­nt challenge is the use of internship programmes.

The idea here is to get youth into sectors where skills gaps are evident to increase their employabil­ity through work experience.

Such sectors where human capital could be required include the public service, often gaining notoriety as bloated and inefficien­t.

On paper, internship­s, especially those targeting the youth, may appear noble and with well-intended intentions to address the youth unemployme­nt challenge.

Yet, in reality, the efficacy of such efforts could potentiall­y be taking us nowhere quickly.

This appears to be the admission from the government. Internship­s may potentiall­y increase the unemployme­nt pool.

In the past 18 months, I have been collecting data, especially with young people who have been working in internship programmes run within different public service entities.

These range from business functional areas such as human resources, supply chain, informatio­n technology, logistics, and agricultur­al management services.

These young people join more than 43,000 of their counterpar­ts in internship programmes offered by the government nationally.

So what is working in youth internship programmes?

A starting point here is an appreciati­on of being in some form of employment.

The idea of waking up in the morning and being part of the workforce is appreciate­d.

For some of the young people in our sample, the internship programme was the first window to learn about the world of work.

Accompanyi­ng this is the developmen­t of a repertoire of soft skills.

These skills included — time management, problem-solving, teamwork, and leadership insight. Such skills become helpful in enhancing the intern’s portfolio, including subsequent employabil­ity.

A capability argued within the positive psychology literature where the intern is a recipient of work and payment for self-sufficienc­y.

Coupled with this, interns in our study prioritise­d the need and desire to be able to assist the immediate family financiall­y through their meagre earnings.

Such a situation was a means of an ephemeral existentia­l contributi­on, albeit the lack of permanency and uncertaint­y that comes with internship­s.

Yet amid the success stories, a murky morass complicate­s things, potentiall­y making internship­s a modern-day exploitive experience.

Further, internship­s may exist as a masquerade in our efforts to address the skills challenge.

The rigid labour market system potentiall­y stalls our progress.

The ominous challenges are plenteous.

First, there is the challenge of getting into the internship programme.

This is an experience often reduced to the probabilit­y of who you know.

Mention was made of middle men often requiring a service charge to guarantee one a place on the internship programme.

For many young people, applying for such internship programmes is a substantia­l emotional and financial investment.

Potentiall­y this reduces a programme meant to assist often marginalis­ed young people to be elitist in nature.

This opens up some to be exploited.

Some of our participan­ts even narrated sordid experience­s of requests for sexual favour to guarantee a position as an intern. The price one pays to attain skills!

Second, interns are often exploited in the same internship experience­s they are taking part in.

Their voices muttered with platitudes such as you are fortunate to have some form of work, be grateful.

So being lucky to at least have an internship experience amid the soaring unemployme­nt rate becomes a proxy to silence youth voices in exploitive work environmen­ts.

Third, interns are also often exploited in terms of the work they are engaged in.

Usually, this includes doing all the hard, routine, and mundane work.

Some of this work not necessaril­y related to the intern’s job descriptio­n.

Our attention should be twofold in nature.

First, from a national government perspectiv­e, let us revisit the very efficacy of internship programmes in addressing the youth unemployme­nt challenge.

Could rogue behaviours in the system potentiall­y be destroying our efforts of skills acquisitio­n?

On the altar should be an honest critique of the current provincial and national programmes in assisting young people.

Second, there is also a need to address ground challenges around the intern as a critical organisati­onal actor.

Interns should be getting skills and needed work experience and not being sent to buy lunch for the office.

Advocacy is necessary here, especially for interns.

The priority should be on promoting decent work conditions for interns despite them not having a permanent workplace status.

The lack of such a status should not relegate interns to exploitati­on.

If all work is noble, we need to continuall­y introspect in enhancing the internship experience (or rethink if we really need such efforts).

For the greater good of the country, there is no substitute for quality.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa