Stuck at the Start, 50 Years On: Youth unemployment and exclusion in a low-growth
- Siphelele Ngidi
Stuck at the Start, 50 Years On: Youth unemployment and exclusion in a low-growth, unequal, changing economy
This year marks 50 years since the June 16 Soweto uprising and 32 years since the dawn of democracy. While the struggle of 1976 was fundamentally about dignity, opportunity, and the right to a better future, many young people today continue to confront a different, yet deeply structural challenge: exclusion from meaningful economic participation.
South Africa’s persistently low growth, high inequality, and changing labour market have combined to produce one of the highest youth unemployment rates in the world. According to the Quarterly Labour Force Survey (QLFS) for Q1 2026, unemployment among 15–24-year-olds stands at 60.9%, while unemployment among 25–34-year-olds stands at 40.6%, both significantly above the national unemployment rate.
Youth unemployment is a distinct crisis because exclusion during the youth phase of life carries long-term consequences. Prolonged periods outside employment increase the risk of labour market scarring, including weaker lifetime earnings, reduced employability, and long-term entrapment in unemployment or low-quality work. For many young adults entering their prime years of work and household formation, exclusion from stable employment also shapes wealth accumulation, housing security, and the conditions into which the next generation is born, reinforcing intergenerational inequality.
Thus, by “stuck at the start,” I refer to a condition in which young people enter the labour market from structurally unequal positions, with limited access to quality opportunities and constrained pathways for upward mobility. Under apartheid, this exclusion was deliberately engineered through systems such as Bantu education, which ensured that Black South Africans entered the economy from disadvantaged positions. Today, economic stagnation and structural changes interacting with persistent inequalities continue to reproduce unequal starting points.
The problem is therefore not simply that young people are unwilling to work, possess “useless degrees,” or lack ambition. Such narratives fail to capture the complexity of the crisis. South Africa’s youth unemployment challenge is unfolding within a low-growth economy undergoing rapid structural change. Weak labour demand, underemployment, rising skill requirements, automation, spatial inequality, and the shift toward a service-oriented economy all continue to shape who can access opportunity and who is left behind.
In this context, unemployment is not random. Those from wealthier households are better positioned to absorb the costs of job search, access stronger social networks, and navigate an increasingly competitive labour market. Meanwhile, many young people from disadvantaged backgrounds remain concentrated in precarious, informal, or low-quality employment with limited opportunities for mobility.
Fifty years after the generation of 1976 rose against systemic exclusion, South Africa still confronts the unresolved question of unequal economic participation. The challenge facing the country is no longer simply whether young people can access education, but whether the economy itself can create pathways for meaningful inclusion and mobility. Without confronting the economic conditions that continue to reproduce unequal starting points, large portions of South Africa’s youth will remain stuck at the start.