Youth Unemployment Scenarios

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2040
A01=Maximilian Matschke
Addressing Youth Unemployment
Arab Spring
Author_Maximilian Matschke
Category=JBSL
Category=JP
Category=KCF
Category=KCM
Category=KJW
Category=KNX
complex systems analysis
Demographic Dividend
Education System
educational policy reform
Employment Drivers
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
future employment forecasting South Africa
Fw De Klerk
labor economics
labour market dynamics
Makhado
mass unemployment
NEET Rate
Nelson Mandela Bay
Pay For Performance
political instability risk
Public Private Partnership
RDP House
scenario analysis
scenario planning methods
skills migration strategies
SME
SME Growth
South Africa
South African National Development Plan
systems theory
Tackle Youth Unemployment
Tertiary Education
Thokoza
Ticking Time Bomb
TVET
TVET College
Uncertain Driver
Young Man
Youth Employment
youth unemployment

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032029665
  • Weight: 240g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 27 May 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book examines the factors driving youth unemployment in South Africa, exploring potential future outcomes of its mass unemployment, and offering a variety of strategies to avoid an impending crisis in the country.

Utilizing scenario analysis rooted in complex systems theory while building on statistical and fi eld research, the author illustrates four possible future states of youth employment in South Africa in the year 2040. This includes the South African version of the Arab Spring, where young people riot or agitate for extreme political and social change because of a belief that access to education and jobs is only possible through social status or corruption (Spring), fair access to a high number of jobs supported by Chinese interventions (Summer), a technology- driven decline in the number of jobs where merit- based access for youth is granted (Fall), and the collapse of the economy, with the economy collapsing and youth becoming increasingly desperate (Winter). The author then presents five strategies to fight youth unemployment, including training of youth to start businesses, stimulating small- and medium- sized enterprises, and sending unemployed youth abroad for skills development and to where their labour is needed.

This book will be of interest to scholars of South African politics and economics, labour economics and youth studies, and readers with an interest in tackling youth unemployment independent of the country.

Maximilian Matschke was born and raised in Munich, Germany. He attained a Bachelor’s degree and a Master’s degree in Technology and Management from the Technical University in Munich, and subsequently completed an Honours degree in Technology Management, spending a term abroad at Columbia Business School in New York, and doing internships in Germany, Singapore, China, and Spain. Max started three social ventures, all addressing the issue of youth employment. The first of these, founded in 2011, was a student-run consulting firm in Johannesburg, The Consulting Academy Johannesburg, which later expanded to Cape Town, Nairobi, and Guadalajara. The second was an entrepreneurship boot camp for unemployed youth, which was successfully piloted and used as a base for a train-the-trainer approach. The third, uNowanga, is an upskilling initiative done in collaboration with the international charity, St John, South Africa. It is a programme to send unemployed youth from South Africa to Germany to train as nurses. He interrupted his career in consulting to pursue a doctorate on youth employment in South Africa. The resulting PhD formed the basis for this book.

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