The youth of Kenya are struggling with rampant unemployment and poverty. But ICARE’s new training program will help give them the skills they need to survive.
Ever wonder what life must be like for youth growing up in Kenya?
A developing nation, typically experiencing population explosion, runaway unemployment, menacing poverty, youth desperation and low livelihood standards, communities in Kenya face a constant uphill struggle for sustainability and endurance.
Youth below the age of 30 years make up 36% of Kenya’s population. Most of them live below the poverty line. Approximately 750,000 young men and women graduating at primary and high school levels are added to the job market annually. Although more than 92% have basic formal education, they have no vocational skills training and are far more than the labour market can absorb. Unemployment amongst youth ranges at 70%. The lack of employment opportunities undermine the well-being of the young people, resulting all the more in dependency and a vicious cycle of poverty, social ills, lack of dignity and self-esteem.
Now consider the opportunities that could be afforded with a Vocational Skills Training program to increase enterprise activities and promote self-employment opportunities for youth to make them employable, productive, self-reliant and responsible members of society…
Having identified a need to facilitate vocational skills training for youth out of formal schooling, a small community set about the establishment of Piave Youth Polytechnic in Nakuru County within the Rift Valley region of Kenya.