More Africans are graduating from university than ever before. More are also unemployed, underemployed, or working jobs that don’t require a degree. The credential trap is real.
African employers consistently say they can’t find workers with the skills they need. Most of them are spending less than 0.5% of payroll on training. The gap is of their own making.
Africa’s private tutoring market is worth over $6 billion — and growing fast. It is not a supplement to public education. It is the primary learning system for millions of students.
Dozens of African EdTech companies have shut down or pivoted since 2022. The companies that survived are training Africa’s workforce in ways the venture-backed startups never could.
Africa has added over 300 universities in a decade. Enrolment is up. Graduate employment is down. The continent is running a credential inflation crisis in slow motion.
After years of chasing consumers who couldn’t pay, Africa’s surviving EdTech companies are pivoting to government contracts — a harder sale with very different unit economics.
After years of chasing consumers who couldn’t pay, Africa’s surviving EdTech companies are pivoting to government contracts — a harder sale with a very different unit economics.
African teachers are leaving for the UK, Gulf, and private schools at rates that threaten public education systems continent-wide. The numbers explain why.
Africa’s Qualifications Recognition Disaster: Five Years of ACQF and Fewer Than 10 Countries Have Implemented It Africa’s Qualifications Recognition Disaster: Five Years of ACQF and Fewer Than 10 Countries Have…
Africa’s Curriculum Trap: University Degrees Are Being Designed for Jobs That No Longer Exist Africa’s Curriculum Trap: University Degrees Are Being Designed for Jobs That No Longer Exist The continent’s…