This paper evaluates the potential contribution the National Committee on Educational Objectives and Policies Report 1976 (NCEOP) is likely to make in creating employment. A brief review of the labour market is presented. This is followed by a discussion on the structural problems that Kenya encounters in harnessing the resources particularly labour, for productive purposes. The role of education in employment creation is also examined. It is strongly suggested that the lack of employment is not an educational problem. Rather, the main causes of unemployment are rooted in the basic structure of the society. In the broad context of employment creation, the NCEOP is seen as recommending marginal alterations on the existing educational ...
A Journal article by Gilbert Mugambi Miriti, an Adjunct Faculty in the Chandaria School of Business ...
This paper begins with an overview of a field research project which has focused on the problem of l...
* This paper is part of my on-going PhD thesis. I would like to thank Prof. Steve Kayizzi for his va...
This paper explores the employment challenge in Kenya. It focused on the past employment creation in...
In Kenya, the economic growth rate has not been sufficient to create enough employment opportunities...
Unemployment is a major problem in Kenya. It has made many young university graduates demoralized. U...
This paper is an attempt to synthesize and interpret the literature on higher education and employme...
The government of Kenya with the support of multilateral donors, especially the World Bank, has intr...
More than one million Kenyan youth enter the labour market every year, yet many young people struggl...
Youth skills development, poverty and unemployment are prominent global concerns. Pressure to expand...
The Government of Kenya recognizes the importance of education and training in national development....
This paper discusses the manpower development potential of skills training occurring outside formal ...
Since the late 1960s a major feature of the Kenya economy has been the rising unemployment of school...
The paper begins with a very short summary of the growing employment problem in urban areas of Kenya...
The present study attempts to assess the extent to which economic differences between ethnic groups ...
A Journal article by Gilbert Mugambi Miriti, an Adjunct Faculty in the Chandaria School of Business ...
This paper begins with an overview of a field research project which has focused on the problem of l...
* This paper is part of my on-going PhD thesis. I would like to thank Prof. Steve Kayizzi for his va...
This paper explores the employment challenge in Kenya. It focused on the past employment creation in...
In Kenya, the economic growth rate has not been sufficient to create enough employment opportunities...
Unemployment is a major problem in Kenya. It has made many young university graduates demoralized. U...
This paper is an attempt to synthesize and interpret the literature on higher education and employme...
The government of Kenya with the support of multilateral donors, especially the World Bank, has intr...
More than one million Kenyan youth enter the labour market every year, yet many young people struggl...
Youth skills development, poverty and unemployment are prominent global concerns. Pressure to expand...
The Government of Kenya recognizes the importance of education and training in national development....
This paper discusses the manpower development potential of skills training occurring outside formal ...
Since the late 1960s a major feature of the Kenya economy has been the rising unemployment of school...
The paper begins with a very short summary of the growing employment problem in urban areas of Kenya...
The present study attempts to assess the extent to which economic differences between ethnic groups ...
A Journal article by Gilbert Mugambi Miriti, an Adjunct Faculty in the Chandaria School of Business ...
This paper begins with an overview of a field research project which has focused on the problem of l...
* This paper is part of my on-going PhD thesis. I would like to thank Prof. Steve Kayizzi for his va...