According to allafrica.com, more than 60% of young people aged 15 to 24 in South Africa are unemployed — a crisis exacerbated by a widening gap between academic qualifications and workplace-ready digital capabilities, particularly in artificial intelligence (AI).
The Skills Mismatch Crisis
Businesses across South Africa report difficulty hiring recent graduates due to a lack of practical computer skills. Nearly half of all graduates are either unemployed or underemployed — working in roles below their skill level — within their first year after completing studies. This disconnect reflects systemic shortcomings in education delivery, not a shortage of talent.
AI as a Workplace Imperative, Not a Replacement
As highlighted by Riaz Moola, chief executive of HyperionDev, employers increasingly seek workers who can apply AI tools to real-world tasks — accelerating output and improving quality. Crucially, the source states AI is not replacing people, but empowering those equipped to use it effectively. However, many graduates struggle to complete end-to-end projects acceptable to employers, often stalling before delivery.
“We are producing thousands of graduates every year, but far too few are equipped with practical, job-ready skills.” — Riaz Moola, Chief Executive of HyperionDev
Root Causes and Required Shifts
The source identifies three interrelated gaps: absence of hands-on learning, insufficient mentorship, and misalignment between curricula and employer-defined job goals. Without intervention, the chasm between education and employment will continue expanding. South Africa’s youthful demographic profile and urgent demand for digital fluency mean that timely reform directly influences whether national inequality narrows or deepens.
From a practitioner perspective, supply chain professionals operating in or sourcing from Southern Africa must recognize that AI literacy is no longer confined to IT departments. Procurement analysts, logistics coordinators, warehouse supervisors, and customs compliance officers increasingly rely on AI-augmented tools for demand forecasting, route optimization, documentation automation, and risk assessment. The inability to recruit locally skilled personnel may extend onboarding timelines, increase training costs, or necessitate greater reliance on offshore support — all impacting responsiveness and cost structure. Moreover, this dynamic mirrors broader regional trends: Kenya’s iHub and Nigeria’s Andela have similarly emphasized project-based coding bootcamps to bridge AI and software engineering gaps, while the African Union’s Digital Transformation Strategy for Africa (2020–2030) explicitly prioritizes AI capacity building as foundational to industrial development and cross-border trade efficiency.
Source: allafrica.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










