The struggle with unemployment is bigger than what meets the eye. It destroys a person within. It takes away humanity and leaves an individual with a range of anger. It is the creator and founder of many criminals and drug lords.
Currently, in South Africa unemployment is at its peak and the government does not seem to be making an effort to handle the situation except by making empty promises. Like the speech by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the Opening of Jobs Summit in 2008 “In the National Development Plan, we said we aim to reduce unemployment to at least 6% by 2030” however unemployment rate keeps on fluctuating. Instead, unemployed individuals are being given R350 monthly. However, the R350 is not much of an assistant as it gets finished mostly on toiletries. As a job hunter, you need to have transport fare monthly as you go out to hand curriculum vitae (CV) once or twice a month. The R350 cannot cover toiletries, food, transport fare, printing, and photocopying of CVs and documents.
Unemployment taints the importance of education as there are many unemployed graduates out there. The rate of unemployed graduates in South Africa aged 15-24 years decreased from 40.3% to 32.6% in quarter 1 of 2022 while it increased by 6.9% to 22.4% for those aged 25-34 years. And those who have less than a matric have an unemployment rate of 51.5%. South Africa is among the highest both in Africa and the world as it has a 32% of unemployment rate. Those who are illiterate or rather did not go to universities or colleges always mock graduates by saying “You wasted your time and money for nothing because you are unemployed just like us without degrees or diplomas. We all wake up to sit in the sun all day long.” According to World Economic Forum South Africa, the unemployment rate is expected to hit 35.6% in 2030 due to slow economic growth and stringent labour laws.
A recent graduate by the name of Siyakha Mzondi, when asked whether he is looking forward to being called a graduate in South Africa said: “Although there is a high unemployment rate on graduates I am looking forward to being one because it is much easier to job hunt when you qualify compared to when you only have matric.” While on the other hand, a graduate that did not want to be mentioned said she once looked forward to graduating and holding a valid qualification. However, she never imagined how things turned out. She has been job hunting for years with no luck. Sometimes she does get internships and they do not pay her enough money to cover her expenses. She said, “Studying until you graduate is an achievement worthy to be celebrated but it also brings pain and sorrow especially when you see those with connections getting proper jobs while you sitting at home with your qualification.”
The more unemployment increases it also increase depression rate. Several people are depressed due to being not able to provide for themselves and some people do not even have a person that helps them with basic needs, they only have themselves to look out to. Unemployment leads to depression. Depression is a mental disorder that affects your moods and causes a loss of interest in things you used to love and enjoy. Depression is caused by stressful events. However, someone can become depressed due to their personality like having low self-esteem or being overly self-critical. A depressed person can experience changes in sleep patterns, loss of appetite, fatigue, lack of concentration, and weight changes. Depression sometimes leads to suicidal thoughts
Unemployment is a serial killer. It has the power of making people feel like failures. We can make education fashionable all we want but if the rate of unemployment still goes up unattended too we are all wasting our time.
Connections have more power than qualifications and not everyone is highly connected. Some grew up in rural areas with no connection the only hope is education which is slowly losing its value.
As we all have a right to education, I also believe we have a right to access good-paying jobs!


