Audio By Carbonatix
Former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ghana, Prof. Ernest Aryeetey is blaming the spate of graduate unemployment on the weaknesses in the structure of Ghana's economy.
Speaking at the 10th Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology Summer School, he urged the government to concentrate on providing solutions to these problems.
“The government has to accept that we have a major structural problem and until we solve it pushing all the kids into KNUST and Accra Technical University will not solve the problem.
“They will get degrees but they won’t get jobs, only a few of them will find jobs,” he said.
He also attributed the menace to the slow growth of the Ghanaian industry.
“The other part is that the industry is not ready for them. If you look at this, what it tells you clearly is that industry in Africa is not growing.
“Industry in Africa is not growing, we have seen services grow but most of those services I can tell you as an economist are low scale informal activities so industry that requires the type of skills that the university produce is not growing,” he said
The KNUST Summer School is an initiative that brings together staff of the university and their affiliate institutions and partners to enhance their knowledge in implementing sustainable development goals to improve the quality of work and promote higher quality in education.
This year's Summer School which is being decentralized into various colleges and units is under the theme, "Academia-Industry Partnership for National Development."
Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Accent and Arts Limited, Mrs. Constance Swaniker encouraged the university to incorporate mandatory internships in their academic work.
“Internships and apprenticeship should also be part of your curriculum and should be mandatory for all students. It must be part of the credit hours of all students
“And it should begin from year one until they graduate. Don’t send them to us when they are in their third year and you expect them to work with us for three months, it doesn’t work that way.
“The more you practice then you pick up skill set, so right from year one, they should be going to industry every year till they graduate,” she said.
Latest Stories
-
Let’s save lives – Akandoh tells hospital staff
12 minutes -
Kwakye Ofosu defends economic record, criticises previous administration
13 minutes -
You inherited a dark Ghana, today it is bright – Ayariga hails Mahama’s leadership
26 minutes -
Daily Insight for CEOs: Reflecting, Adjusting, and Recalibrating.
38 minutes -
From a broken tripod to millions of views – ‘Three of a Kind’ content creators share their journey
44 minutes -
Group launches nationwide campaign against illicit trade amid declining government revenue
44 minutes -
Access Bank donates 1st tranche of 1million sanitary pads
50 minutes -
Ghana’s future relies on every citizen’s contribution — President Mahama
50 minutes -
Mahama pledges military modernization with new bases, helicopters, and expanded forces
52 minutes -
Parliament erupts in chants as Majority, Minority trade symbols after Mahama’s SONA
54 minutes -
SONA 2026: One year, still slogans – Afenyo-Markin blasts Mahama
60 minutes -
SONA 2026: Afenyo-Markin slams gov’t performance over electricity, cocoa, and galamsey challenges
1 hour -
Give to Bawumia what belongs to him – Afenyo-Markin credits former Veep for Gold-for-Reserve Policy
1 hour -
Mahama announces AICC renovation, plan for new convention centre
1 hour -
The Entrepreneurial Agenda: Institutionalising financial capacity for MSME growth
2 hours
