ABSTRACT
This study was intended to find out how population growth rate affects unemployment 111
kansanga parish, in Kampala-Uganda. At a population growth rate of three percent per
annum, Kansanga has one of the highest growth rates in Kampala. The country depends
predominantly on agricultu re as the backbone of its economy. The sector employs well over
81 percent of the country's 35 million people and contributes about 34 percent of Gross
Domestic Product (GDP). But despite the importance of the agricultural sector to the
economy, most agriculture remains subsistence and relies mainly on the rains as the main
source of water.
Uganda has been challenged to translate recovery-based economic buoyancy into sustainable
growth with solving unemployment in pursuit of national and intemational development
targets. As the country weighs various options for stimulating an appropriate response to the
economic slowdown of the recent years, it is impot1ant that policy considerations be infotmed
by a review of the different growth strategies and episodes that the country has experienced.
This paper, therefore, provides an overview of the broad economic strategies that have been
implemented in Uganda since 1962 when it attained independence. By focusing on what
transpired during the 1990s into the 2000s, the paper aims to assess the extent to which recent
development strategies promoted the pruiicipation of unemployed poor people in Kansanga
growth process. Furthermore, the paper highlights the tradeoffs associated with policies that
emphasize growth versus those that emphasize distribution in pursuit of solving
w1cmployment/poverty reduction in Kansanga.
With a whooping unemployment rate of 30%, but boasting of an 88% literacy rate, the
embers of the Tunisian Revolution were kept glowing by an army of frustrated angry, but
highly intelligent techno-sa·vy young people. Although Tunisia is an Arab country with little
in common in terms of standard of living, history and culture with Uganda. there are some
uncanny similarities between the two countries that can pro'ide some invaluable lessons to
the Kampala regime.
One such lesson is that it's dru1gcrous to ignore soaring unemployment among a country's
youths, especially the educated lot. During the just concluded pol ls at kansanga , president
Museveni enthralled the young people of this country with "you want another rap?" song.
Subsequently, millions of youths decided to entrust their destiny with president Muse eni by
overwhelmingly voting for him. Whether president Museveni reciprocates the confidence
Ugandan youths reposed in his leadership by sanctioning policies aimed at helping youths
meet challenges- such as unemployment facing them remains to be seen. However, what is
indisputable is that the unemployment statistics and the concomitant pove1ty among the
youths especially the educated lot is a cause for concern, since Uganda has largely a young
population.
According to the labour flow figures at Uganda Investment Authority (UIA) and the Uganda
Bureau of Statistics (Ubos), of more than 400,000 Ugandans who enter the labour market
each year, only about 113,000 are absorbed in formal employment, leaving the rest to forage
for jobs in the infonnal sector.
Uganda's unemployment rate is 3.5% and that of the youth is a whopping 32.2%, while for
those who have University degrees is 36 per cent. Although the govemment of president
Museveni has made "investing in young people" one of its fundamental social obligation by
making it the fifth pillar of Uganda's Poverty Eradication Action Plan (which is the country's
overall national plmming framework) , soaring unemployment among youths is an indicator
that it still has a lot of ground to cover.
The aforementioned whammy has been exacerbated by a spiraiing population growth, which
is one of the highest in the world. According to the Population Reference Bureau, a
Washington D.C based research and advocacy group. Uganda's population growth rate of 3.5
is way ahead of the world's, which is 1.2% This is worrying because a population growth that
cannot be matched by the ability of the economy to create jobs will only lead to worsening
unemployment.
Uganda's rapidly increasing population might lead to environmental degradation and the
und~nnining of the country's food security. The fact that Uganda has not heavily irwestcd in
renewable energy like solar and wind. an increasing population that largely depends on !ossil
fuel will definitely cause deforestation and land wrangles as arable land continue to dimmish.
Therefore, this ever increasing population rates have heavily impacted the cycle of
unemployment, which particularly affects the youth and reduces their potential to find jobs
urgently as they graduate from schools, colleges and universities whereby the available
vacancies in the job market are very scarce and ever declining to low levels which can·t be
predicted in the near futur
ELMI, D (2021). Impact Of Population Gro\Vth Rate On Unemployment Case Study Kansal~Ga Parish. Afribary. Retrieved from https://afribary.com/works/impact-of-population-gro-vth-rate-on-unemployment-case-study-kansal-ga-parish
ELMI, DAHIR "Impact Of Population Gro\Vth Rate On Unemployment Case Study Kansal~Ga Parish" Afribary. Afribary, 03 Jun. 2021, https://afribary.com/works/impact-of-population-gro-vth-rate-on-unemployment-case-study-kansal-ga-parish. Accessed 27 Nov. 2024.
ELMI, DAHIR . "Impact Of Population Gro\Vth Rate On Unemployment Case Study Kansal~Ga Parish". Afribary, Afribary, 03 Jun. 2021. Web. 27 Nov. 2024. < https://afribary.com/works/impact-of-population-gro-vth-rate-on-unemployment-case-study-kansal-ga-parish >.
ELMI, DAHIR . "Impact Of Population Gro\Vth Rate On Unemployment Case Study Kansal~Ga Parish" Afribary (2021). Accessed November 27, 2024. https://afribary.com/works/impact-of-population-gro-vth-rate-on-unemployment-case-study-kansal-ga-parish