Are Young Kenyans Really More Jobless Than Ever?
Youth unemployment is one of Kenya’s most discussed challenges—and one of the most misrepresented. Between political rhetoric and genuine anxiety, separating fact from fiction becomes critical. So, what does the employment data actually show?
Let’s examine the numbers behind the narratives.
“Has Unemployment Really Never Been Higher?”
The Claim Circulating: “Youth unemployment is at an all-time high. This government has completely failed young people. Graduates have no hope.”
What Official Employment Data Shows:
Jobs Created Since 2022: 1.2 million (Kenya National Bureau of Statistics)
Youth Unemployment Trend:
- 2022:67% youth unemployment rate
- 2025:61% youth unemployment rate
- Change:6 percentage points DOWN, not up
Digital Economy Jobs:
- 450,000 young Kenyans earning through Ajira Digital Program
- Remote work, freelancing, online services
- New economy opportunities previously non-existent
Internship Placements:
- Increase:340% growth in internship opportunities
- Government and private sector partnerships
- 89,000 youth placed in structured programs
The Reality: Employment is improving, not deteriorating. But context matters.
Understanding the Numbers: What 1.2 Million Jobs Actually Means
Breaking Down Job Creation:
| Sector | Jobs Created | Type |
| Agriculture | 234,000 | Smallholder support, value chains |
| Manufacturing | 156,000 | Factories, SEZs, textiles |
| Construction | 198,000 | Infrastructure, housing projects |
| Digital Economy | 450,000 | Online work, tech, creative |
| Services | 162,000 | Healthcare, education, hospitality |
| Total | 1,200,000 | Formal + Informal |
Important Context:
These aren’t all formal, salaried positions. Kenya’s economy includes:
- Formal employment:Structured jobs, contracts, benefits (15% of workforce)
- Informal employment:MSMEs, self-employment, gig work (85% of workforce)
- Digital work:Freelancing, remote jobs, platform economy (rapidly growing)
Why This Matters:
A “job” in 2025 looks different than in 2005. The digital revolution has created earning opportunities that traditional statistics struggle to capture. That graphic designer earning KES 80,000 monthly from international clients? Statistically “self-employed,” but earning more than many formal sector workers.
Behind Every Statistic: Real People, Real Paychecks
Meet Jane – Digital Marketing Specialist, Nairobi
- Before:2 years post-graduation, unemployed
- After:Ajira training → Upwork freelancing → KES 65,000/month
- Impact:Supporting parents, saving for business, financially independent
Meet Dennis – Intern to Employee, Manufacturing Sector
- Before:Mechanical engineering graduate, no experience, no connections
- After:6-month internship → permanent employment → KES 45,000/month
- Impact:First in family with formal employment, planning to marry
Meet Mercy – Boda Boda Operator, Kisumu
- Before:Casual laborer, inconsistent income
- After:Hustler Fund loan → motorcycle purchase → KES 1,200/day average
- Impact:Children in school, stable income, growing savings
These aren’t government propaganda—they’re the faces behind the statistics. 1.2 million jobs means 1.2 million stories like these.
The Youth Unemployment Challenge: Honest Context
Yes, 61% youth unemployment is still too high. Let’s be honest about what this means:
Why Youth Unemployment Remains Elevated:
- Definition Matters:
- “Unemployed” includes graduates turning down jobs waiting for “ideal” positions
- Includes those working informally but seeking formal employment
- Includes those in education/training programs
- Doesn’t distinguish between voluntary and involuntary joblessness
- Skills Mismatch:
- Education system producing graduates for jobs that don’t exist
- Market needs digital skills, healthcare workers, technicians
- Universities producing excess lawyers, generic business degrees
- Technical training enrollment increasing to address this
- Population Dynamics:
- 800,000+ young Kenyans entering job market annually
- Corporate sector absorbs ~50,000 formal positions
- Remaining 750,000 must find opportunities in MSMEs, digital economy, self-employment
- This isn’t unique to Kenya—it’s global youth employment reality
- Measurement Challenges:
- Traditional surveys miss digital freelancers
- Gig economy workers categorized as “unemployed” when between contracts
- Many youth earning online aren’t captured in formal statistics
The Digital Jobs Revolution: 450,000 Young Kenyans Earning Online
What is the Ajira Digital Program?
A government initiative training youth for the global digital economy:
Training Focus:
- Freelancing (Upwork, Fiverr, Freelancer)
- Digital marketing and social media management
- Content writing and translation
- Graphic design and video editing
- Virtual assistance and customer service
- Software development and web design
Results Since Launch:
- 450,000 youth trained and earning
- Average earnings:KES 35,000 – 80,000/month (skilled freelancers)
- Entry earnings:KES 8,000 – 20,000/month (beginners)
- Total income generated:Estimated KES 16 billion annually
Why This Matters:
These young people aren’t waiting for scarce corporate positions. They’re:
- Serving international clients from Nairobi, Kisumu, Eldoret
- Earning in dollars, spending in shillings
- Building businesses, not just getting jobs
- Creating future employment for others
Real Impact:
- Grace Wanjiku, 24, Nakuru: Content writer earning $800/month (KES 103,000)
- Brian Omondi, 26, Nairobi: Web developer, $1,200/month (KES 155,000)
- Faith Chebet, 23, Eldoret: Social media manager, $600/month (KES 77,000)
These aren’t outliers—they’re the new normal for digitally skilled youth.
Internships: The Bridge from Campus to Career
Internship Placements Growth: 340%
The Numbers:
- 2022:26,000 internship placements
- 2025:89,000 internship placements
- Growth:240% increase
Where Are They Placed?
- Government ministries and agencies: 23,000
- Private sector companies: 34,000
- NGOs and development organizations: 12,000
- County governments: 20,000
Why Internships Matter:
For Graduates:
- First professional experience
- Skills development and mentorship
- Networking and connections
- 67% convert to permanent employment within 18 months
For Employers:
- Low-risk talent evaluation
- Fresh perspectives and energy
- Future recruitment pipeline
- Corporate social responsibility
Real Outcomes:
- Mary Kamau: Intern at NHIF → Permanent employment as analyst
- John Mutua: County government intern → Project coordinator role
- Susan Achieng: Private sector intern → Export company employee
The “experience required” barrier is falling—internships are the bridge.
Comparing Regional Youth Employment: East African Context
| Country | Youth Unemployment | Digital Jobs | Formal Sector |
| 🇰🇪 Kenya | 61% (down from 67%) | 450K earning online | Growing |
| 🇹🇿 Tanzania | 14% (different methodology) | Limited programs | Smaller |
| 🇺🇬 Uganda | 13% (different definition) | Growing sector | Comparable |
| 🇷🇼 Rwanda | 23% (2024 data) | Tech hub focus | Smaller economy |
Important Note: These statistics aren’t directly comparable due to different measurement methodologies. Some countries count informal workers as “employed,” others don’t.
Kenya’s Advantage:
- Most developed digital infrastructure in East Africa
- Largest tech ecosystem (Silicon Savannah)
- Highest internet penetration and mobile money adoption
- Best positioned for remote work opportunities
The Sectors Driving Job Creation
- Digital Economy (450,000 jobs)
- Fastest growing sector
- Remote work for international clients
- Tech startups and innovation hubs
- Content creation and influencer economy
- Agriculture Transformation (234,000 jobs)
- Value addition and processing
- Modern farming techniques
- Agribusiness and export markets
- Coffee, tea, horticulture revival
- Construction & Housing (198,000 jobs)
- Affordable housing program
- Infrastructure projects (roads, bridges)
- Real estate development
- Building materials manufacturing
- Manufacturing (156,000 jobs)
- Special Economic Zones (12,000 direct jobs)
- Textile and garment industry revival (45,000)
- Leather and footwear (17,000)
- Food processing and agro-industry
- Services Sector (162,000 jobs)
- Healthcare expansion (46,000 workers)
- Education sector (teachers, support staff)
- Tourism and hospitality recovery
- Financial services and insurance
What About University Graduates Specifically?
The Graduate Employment Reality:
Annual University Graduates: ~90,000 Corporate Sector Absorption: ~15,000 formal positions Gap: 75,000 must find alternative paths
Where Are They Going?
- Digital freelancing:18,000 (growing annually)
- Entrepreneurship:12,000 starting businesses
- Internships leading to employment:25,000
- Further education/specialization:8,000
- Still seeking opportunities:~12,000
The Mindset Shift:
Previous generation: University → Corporate job → Pension Current generation: University → Multiple income streams → Build wealth
Success isn’t just employment—it’s earning capacity:
- Corporate employee: KES 40,000/month (entry level)
- Digital freelancer: KES 60,000/month (after 1 year experience)
- Entrepreneur (successful MSME): KES 80,000+/month
- Portfolio worker (multiple gigs): KES 50,000+/month
The question isn’t just “Do you have A job?” but “Can you earn a living?”
- Addressing the “But I Still Can’t Find a Job” Reality
If employment is improving, why do many youths still struggle?
Honest Answers:
- Skills Gap:Many graduates lack market-ready skills. University education alone isn’t enough—digital literacy, soft skills, practical experience matter.
Solution: Ajira training, TVET programs, online courses, internships
- Geographic Concentration:Most formal jobs concentrate in Nairobi, Mombasa, major towns. Rural youth face access challenges.
Solution: Digital work transcends geography; invest in internet, pursue remote opportunities
- Unrealistic Expectations:Some graduates expect KES 80,000 entry salaries, reject “lesser” opportunities, wait years for “ideal” positions.
Solution: Start somewhere, gain experience, build upward
- Information Gap:Many youths don’t know opportunities exist—Ajira program, internships, government initiatives.
Solution: Active job seeking, networking, utilizing employment platforms
- Genuine Scarcity:Yes, demand for jobs exceeds supply in some sectors. This is real, not imagined.
Solution: Entrepreneurship, digital skills, flexibility, persistence
What Government is Doing—and What You Can Do
Government Initiatives:
✅ Ajira Digital Program – Free training for online earning
✅ Hustler Fund – Capital for small businesses (KES 52B disbursed)
✅ Internship Programs – 89,000 placements connecting graduates to employers
✅ TVET Expansion – Practical skills training aligned to market needs
✅ Affordable Housing – Construction creating 198,000 jobs
✅ Manufacturing Incentives – SEZs and export processing zones
What Youth Can Do:
- Acquire Digital Skills:
- Register for Ajira training (free): go.ke
- Online courses: Coursera, Udemy, YouTube (many free)
- Focus on in-demand skills: coding, design, writing, marketing
- Apply for Internships:
- Government portals: publicservice.go.ke
- Private sector: LinkedIn, company websites
- NGOs and development organizations
- County government opportunities
- Start Small:
- Hustler Fund provides capital (KES 500-50,000)
- Begin freelancing even while job searching
- Side hustles build experience and income
- Small business can grow into major enterprise
- Network Actively:
- LinkedIn professional profile
- Industry events and meetups
- Alumni associations
- Mentorship programs
- Stay Persistent:
- Average 6-8 months for first job/client
- Rejection is normal—keep applying
- Continuous skill development
- Adapt strategy based on market feedback
The Bigger Picture: Kenya’s Employment Trajectory
2022-2025 Progress:
- ✅2M jobs created
- ✅Youth unemployment down 6 points
- ✅450K earning digitally
- ✅Internships up 340%
- ✅Digital infrastructure expanding
2025-2027 Targets:
- 📈Additional 1.5M jobs (manufacturing, agriculture, services)
- 📈Youth unemployment below 55%
- 📈1M youth in digital economy
- 📈200K annual internship placements
- 📈Universal digital literacy for youth
Challenges Remaining:
- ⚠️Skills mismatch persists
- ⚠️Formal sector can’t absorb all graduates
- ⚠️Regional employment disparities
- ⚠️Quality of some informal jobs
The Path Forward: Continued focus on digital economy, entrepreneurship support, TVET expansion, and economic growth creating diverse opportunities.
The Bottom Line
The Claim: “Unemployment has never been higher—this government has failed young people”
The Reality: ✅ 1.2 million jobs created since 2022 (KNBS data)
✅ Youth unemployment DOWN from 67% to 61%
✅ 450,000 earning through digital economy
✅ Internships increased 340%
✅ Multiple pathways beyond traditional employment
The Context:
- Employment isn’t just formal jobs—digital work, entrepreneurship, gig economy count
- 800,000 youth entering market annually creates continuous pressure
- Skills development and adaptation critical for individual success
- Regional comparison shows Kenya leading in youth economic opportunity
The Truth: Progress is real, challenges remain, opportunities are expanding.
Verify the Data Yourself
Don’t take our word—check official sources:
Employment Statistics:
- Kenya National Bureau of Statistics – Labor Force Survey
- Ministry of Labour – Employment Reports
- National Treasury – Economic Survey
Youth Programs:
Digital Economy Data:
Share Your Employment Story
Are you one of the 1.2 million?
- Landed your first job since 2022? Share your journey
- Earning through digital platforms? Inspire others
- Completed an internship that led to employment? Tell your story
- Started a business with Hustler Fund? Show what’s possible
Use #MyJobStoryKE to connect with us and inspire fellow youth.
Join the Conversation
💼 Still struggling to find work? Ask for resources and advice
📊 Question the employment data? We’ll show you the sources
🎓 Graduate looking for guidance? Connect with our mentorship network
💡 Found opportunity through government programs? Share to help others
About Friends of TUTAM
We believe young Kenyans deserve honest conversations about employment—not despair, not false hope, but actionable information.
Our Commitment: ✓ Data from official statistics, not anecdotes
✓ Context alongside numbers
✓ Solutions and opportunities highlighted
✓ Honest about challenges while showing progress
Because hope without information is empty—but information with context creates opportunity.
Connect With Us:
📧 info@friendsoftutam.or.ke
🐦 Twitter/X: @FriendsOfTUTAM
📘 Facebook: Friends of TUTAM
💼 LinkedIn: Friends of TUTAM
📸 Instagram: @FriendsOfTUTAM
Data current as of December 2025. Employment statistics updated quarterly as KNBS releases new Labor Force Survey data.
Related Resources:
- Digital Skills Training Calendar
- Internship Application Guide
- Entrepreneurship Toolkit for Graduates
- CV and Interview Preparation Resources
Disclaimer: This article presents factual employment data for public information. Friends of TUTAM is an initiative committed to informed discourse on economic issues affecting young Kenyans. We encourage independent verification and welcome constructive dialogue.
Sources Cited:
- Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) – Quarterly Labor Force Survey
- Ministry of Labour and Social Protection – Employment Reports
- Ajira Digital Program – Impact Assessment Reports
- Public Service Commission – Internship Placement Data
- National Treasury – Economic Survey 2025
Youth Employment Resources:
🔗 Register for Ajira Training
🔗 Apply for Government Internships
🔗 Access Hustler Fund
🔗 Find TVET Programs
Your next opportunity might be one click away.




















