23pc of unemployed women in Punjab have
master's degree
28 April 2023
The overall unemployment rate in Punjab has
reached 6.9pc with the highest rate of
unemployment by age-group found amongst the
youth (aged 15-29) at 10.9pc and the female
youth with Master’s degree make up over 23pc
of all unemployed female youth.
According to a research conducted by Gallup
Pakistan and PRIDE (Policy Research,
Innovation, Development & Education), using
data from the Labour Force Survey-2020- 21,
among all the divisions of Punjab,
Rawalpindi has the highest youth
unemployment rate is a little more than
17pc.
“With the unemployment rate of females being
substantially higher than males (8.32pc vs.
6.06pc) and that of urban residents being
relatively higher than the rate of their
rural counterparts (7.94pc vs 6.11pc).
The analysis of division-wise youth
unemployment rate varies from as low as
4.45pc for Bahawalpur division to as high as
17.78pc for Rawalpindi division,” reads the
report.
The distribution of unemployed youth by
level of education indicates that the youth
having education level of ‘Matric but below
Intermediate’, make up the highest
proportion of the unemployed youth at
20.01pc while the youth having ‘less than
one year of education’ comprises the lowest
share of unemployed youth at 0.39pc.
What’s surprising is
that 23.52pc of unemployed female youth in
Punjab have a Master’s level degree. This
share is over seven times higher than the
corresponding share of the unemployed male
youth (around 3pc of unemployed males have a
Master’s degree).
The research analysis shows that the Lahore
division has the highest population (20.7m)
in the whole province whereas the Sahiwal
division has the lowest population (7.9m).
Gujranwala division has the highest rural
population of 10.9m and the Lahore division
has the highest urban population of 14.4m in
Punjab.
The analysis shows that in Punjab alone,
there are 31m youngsters aged 18-29 and the
youth population of Punjab alone is
equivalent to the entire population size of
Canada.
Youth unemployment refers to the number of
youth (15-29 years old) population that is
economically active but currently without
work and searching for employment. This
measure does not include the people such as
full-time students or those who are not
looking for work, i.e., those considered
economically inactive individuals. This
indicator serves as a measure of potential
youth labour market entrants that remain
under-utilized.
“The study’s most alarming finding is that a
higher share of educated youth are
unemployed compared to their lesser educated
counterparts. Education, if seen to be not
delivering dividends, would lead to people
dropping off from the education stream and
the vast pool of educated urban youth could
also cause social issues (if not already
causing ones),” Bilal Gilani, executive
director at Gallup Pakistan, said.
Dr Lubna Shahnaz, the chief executive
officer at PRIDE, said: ‘Labour force
statistics usually available at national or
provincial level do not adequately capture
the labour market dynamics across different
regions even within a particular province.
More disaggregated statistics at divisional
level would enable a more in-depth
examination of the labour market situation
and facilitate in the development of
relevant policies and programs at a grass
roots level”.
The current series of reports would be
looking at the Labour Force Survey 2020-21,
which is a large-scale survey, covering
close to 100,000 households, conducted by
the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS).
©Dawn |