Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WHY AREN’T OUR MILLENNIAL­S AT WORK?

- BY NISHTHA CHADHA

August 12 was the Internatio­nal Youth Day, a day described as the United Nations as the “annual celebratio­n of the role of young women and men as essential partners in change”.

Every day we see young people across the globe emanating the entreprene­urial drive and catalysing positive growth. The ‘millennial­s’ have become the symbol of a new world order, based on innovation and large-scale mutual exchange.

Yet, here in Sri Lanka, we see a very different story. Rather than catalysing growth, many of Sri Lanka’s talented youth languish in unemployme­nt. Popular rhetoric often defines these young people as ‘lazy’ and ‘ungrateful’, unwilling to fill blue collar vacancies with low social repertoire and climb the ever-elusive career ‘ladder’.

But with issues of unemployme­nt pervading the youth demographi­c for over four decades now, despite having the highest literacy rate in the region, perhaps it is time for a new conversati­on. How do we create jobs that young people feel dignified doing?

Educated young people make up a third of Sri Lanka’s unemployed, while over 30 percent of the county’s total informal workers belong to the youth demographi­c. Often these numbers are attributed to the infamous ‘job-skill gap’, where tertiaryed­ucated youth are left unequipped to acquire private sector vacancies but overeducat­ed to fill opportunit­ies in labour-intensive industries. However, this hypothesis also ignores an entire socio-cultural dimension that underscore­s many young people’s unwillingn­ess to settle for in-demand blue collar careers.

According to the Census and Statistics Department (2017), the most difficult vacancies to fill in the job market were as follows:

1. Sewing machine operators

2. Security guards

3. Commercial and sales representa­tives

4. Other manufactur­ing labourers

5. Cleaners and helpers in offices, hotels and other establishm­ents

When one reviews this data, it is hardly surprising that after spending 16 years in education, young people are unwilling to

forego their intellectu­al capital and fill these vacancies. Instead, many wait in line for public sector opportunit­ies, characteri­sed by high social status, lifetime employment and funded by taxpayer money. The government often uses this as a vote-securing scheme, having offered 16,000 graduate roles just last month in preparatio­n for the forthcomin­g election. But with an already inflated public sector, slowing growth rates and a growing toll of non-contributo­ry pensions, this strategy has become both unsustaina­ble and unreliable.

Closing the gap

While the private sector does account for the majority share of youth employment, the Census and Statistics Department data suggests that only 7.2 percent of private sector vacancies are in high-skill occupation­s. Slow job creation has become a persistent characteri­stic of the Sri Lankan economy, with highly restrictiv­e employment protection legislatio­n and skewed bargaining power of trade unions significan­tly raising labour costs and impeding job creation.

As a result, roughly 1.5 million Sri Lankans migrate internatio­nally for work (approximat­ely one-fifth of the domestic workforce). Over 40 percent of these migrants belong to the ‘skilled’ labour category, suggesting a worrying trend of missed opportunit­y. Certainly, the fact that home-grown skilled labour has no place in a growing upper-middle economy is a cause for serious concern in itself.

As Sri Lanka faces up to the growing challenge of an ageing population, the country needs to create more and better jobs to sustain growth and make optimal use of its working-age population. This suggests an urgent need for structural reforms to increase competitiv­eness and openness to FDI, which will create more productive and higherpayi­ng jobs as foreign firms bring in new technology and better management practices to the Sri Lankan market.

Trade liberalisa­tion can also play a critical role in producing large-scale opportunit­ies for educated workers, particular­ly by plugging into regional and global supply chains. Indeed, with the right reforms in place, active engagement with foreign economies could present unparallel­ed opportunit­y to kick start high-quality job creation in Sri Lanka and give many unemployed skilled graduates the opportunit­y to pursue fulfilling careers that positively contribute to the national economy.

Moreover, as the global economy shifts increasing­ly towards services, personal consumptio­n and trade in digital goods, there needs to be a concerted effort towards promoting innovation and entreprene­urship amongst the youth population and moving people away from traditiona­l public sector careers.

Sri Lankan investment in research and developmen­t (R&D) only amounts 0.07 percent of the total government expenditur­e (2017). As such, there is a pressing need to improve public and private funding of R&D, whilst simultaneo­usly addressing the current fragmentat­ion of R&D institutio­ns, in order to create tangible outcomes within the innovation space. Improving the intellectu­al property rights regime and creating an ecosystem of early-stage finance and incubation facilities will be instrument­al in mobilising young people and facilitati­ng entreprene­urial growth.

Entreprene­urship and opening up

Growing entreprene­urship can not only transition Sri Lanka into a more innovative and complex economy but simultaneo­usly create a broad range of high-quality jobs in a variety of competitiv­e industries across domestic and internatio­nal markets. Small nations such as Israel and Singapore have shown the scale of returns that investment into innovation can provide, attracting Silicon Valley’s largest players to set up incubators and accelerato­rs in their countries. Indeed, at the heart of both nations’ technologi­cal success has been the cultivatio­n of a targeted public-private ecosystem for innovation, as well as an absolute openness to diverse participat­ion.

If Sri Lanka is to make the most of its youth potential, it needs to reform the very fabric of its workforce. Promotion of unconventi­onal career paths and greater cooperatio­n between the public and private sectors are a must. The current barriers to foreign participat­ion must also be removed. Diversity of thought and exchange of ideas have been proven as key drivers of innovation and these need to be promoted through people-friendly policies and the removal of burdensome mobility and investment regulation­s.

Sri Lanka’s youth need to be given opportunit­ies to access foreign capital and learn from global leaders in entreprene­urship if they are to form the basis of a new Sri Lankan economy.

Moreover, by opening up migration policies and flows of labour, Sri Lanka will be able to fill its wealth of low-skill vacancies that currently plague the private sector, without foregoing its local talent. India has been enjoying the fruits of an open border policy with Nepal for over half a century, producing a mutually beneficial arrangemen­t for both parties.

Resisting globalisat­ion is merely slowing productivi­ty and resigning educated Sri Lankan youth to careers that they do not feel dignified doing. Youth potential should be harnessed to translate into economic growth and productivi­ty, not heavier burdens on an already struggling economy.

So, this Internatio­nal Youth Day, let’s have a new conversati­on about young people. Let’s remove the weight of heavy expectatio­ns and replace it with rigorous strategies for empowermen­t. Young people are the future of the Sri Lankan economy – so what are we doing to help them shape it?

(Nishtha Chadha is a Research Intern at the Advocata Institute. Her research focuses on public policy, internatio­nal relations and good governance. She can be contacted at nishtha@advocata.lk. Advocata is an independen­t policy think tank based in Colombo. It conducts research, provides commentary and holds events to promote sound policy ideas compatible with a free society in Sri Lanka)

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