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Millions of Jobs, Zero Qualified People: What’s Really Wrong With Nigerian Youth Employment in 2026


Millions graduate every year in Nigeria. Yet millions of jobs remain empty.
That’s the painful truth we’re not talking about enough.

The CEO of Moniepoint recently said his company has over 5,000 open roles but can’t find people who are actually qualified for them. In the same country where over 75% of youth are unemployed.

Former Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, also shared that Aliko Dangote once told her he struggles to find staff to hire in Nigeria. This is in a country where over 70% of youth are either unemployed or underemployed.

So what’s going on?

There are millions of jobs in Nigeria. But they’re only available to those who can actually do the work.

The problem isn’t a lack of opportunities. The problem is that our education system is not preparing young people to take them.

Why Our Education System Is Failing Nigerian Youth

1. Youth Go to School for Certificates, Not Competence
Most students are chasing a degree certificate, not real skills. The goal is “I graduated” instead of “I can solve problems.” Employers don’t pay for certificates. They pay for competency.

2. Innovation and Skills Are Not Practically Taught
Our classrooms are 80% theory and 20% practice. A graduate can explain digital marketing but can’t run a ₦5,000 Facebook ad. A computer science graduate can’t build a simple WhatsApp landing page. That gap is costing us jobs.

3. A Virus is Infecting Our Institutions
Exploitation. Bribery. Sexual harassment. Many students spend years in school fighting distractions that have nothing to do with learning. Instead of graduating with skills, they graduate with trauma and a mindset that “success comes from connection, not competence.”

4. No Culture of Creativity and Ownership
We raise youth to be job seekers, not job creators. The mindset is “Who can I send my CV to?” instead of “What problem can I solve for ₦50,000 this month?” Creativity is punished in school — you must follow the syllabus, not your ideas.

5. Zero Alignment Between School and Industry
Companies are using AI, remote tools, and digital payments in 2026. But many schools are still teaching with textbooks from 2010. There’s no internship culture. No industry mentorship. No practical projects.

The Hard Truth

There are two types of Nigerian youth today:

Type 1: The Money Chaser — Wants quick cash, no skill, no patience. Jumps from one Ponzi scheme to another.
Type 2: The Competent Builder — Focuses on skill, loyalty, and honesty. Wants to create value and build something real.

Guess which type gets hired? Guess which type starts a business that lasts?

The Skill Gap Isn’t Just Technical — It’s Character

Even if you learn the skill, you’ll lose opportunities if you lack humility and discipline. That’s why the smallest habits matter more than the biggest certificates.

Final Word

The jobs are here in 2026. The money is here. The opportunity is here.

But it’s only for those who can do the work and have the character to keep it.

Don’t graduate with a certificate. Graduate with a skill you can sell and a heart that can learn.

What skill are you building right now? Drop it in the comments — I’ll reply with free resources to help you start.




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