Author
Listed:
- Musitaffa Mweha
(Independent Researcher)
Abstract
This paper examines youth unemployment in Zimbabwe through a comprehensive microeconomic lens, analysing individual, household, and firm-level factors that shape labour market outcomes across both urban and rural contexts. With approximately 60% of Zimbabwe’s population under 25 years of age and a youth unemployment rate of 41%, the country faces a significant socioeconomic challenge requiring targeted interventions. Through systematic analysis of literature and recent data, this research investigates the microeconomic determinants of youth unemployment, including skill mismatches, information asymmetries, household resource constraints, and sector-specific firm hiring behaviours. The study reveals how labour market frictions, coupled with misaligned educational curricula, create persistent barriers that disproportionately affect rural youth, women, and those from resource-constrained backgrounds. At the firm level, risk-averse hiring practices vary significantly across sectors, with agricultural enterprises, manufacturing firms, and service-oriented businesses demonstrating distinct employment patterns and growth constraints. Urban and rural informality emerge as differentiated coping mechanisms, each with unique implications for economic security and productivity. Recent digital skills development initiatives and entrepreneurship support programs demonstrate promising pathways but require greater inclusion, scale, and sustainability considerations. This research contributes to understanding the granular dynamics of youth unemployment across Zimbabwe’s diverse socioeconomic landscape and provides evidence-based, tiered recommendations for targeted interventions that address short, medium, and long-term microeconomic constraints.
Suggested Citation
Musitaffa Mweha, 2025.
"Youth Unemployment in Zimbabwe: A Microeconomic Analysis of Constraints and Intervention Strategies,"
International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science, International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science (IJRISS), vol. 9(15), pages 685-701, May.
Handle:
RePEc:bcp:journl:v:9:y:2025:i:15:p:685-701
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