Tons of school leavers chase tiny technical college slots; reforms helped, but demand still steamrolls capacity.
Skills gap choking industrial goals
Skills gap choking industrial goals
- Joel Chigona flags over 100,000 graduates fighting for roughly 10,000 technical college seats.
- Calls the mismatch a threat to Malawi’s industrial push.
- Says pressure keeps squeezing training institutions.
- Joel Chigona says enrolment once hovered near 2,500.
- Describes the baseline as painfully low.
- Frames reforms as damage control.
- World Bank-backed Skills for a Vibrant Economy Project boosted enrolment close to 10,000.
- Added hostels, classrooms, workshops, and labs.
- Rolled out bursaries and double-stream training.
- Expanded instructor capacity across colleges.
- Built tighter links with the industry.
- Pushed female participation in male-heavy trades.
- Available slots stay way below demand.
- Shortages of instructors and equipment drag expansion.
- Calls grow to scale national and community colleges.
- Muna Salih Meky backs continued support.
- Ties skills training to Malawi 2063 goals.
- Frames it as the groundwork for a self-reliant economy.