The Group Chief Economist and Managing Director of Research and Trade Intelligence, African Export Import Bank, Yemi Kale has lamented that data fragmentation was hindering Nigeria’s productivity, employment opportunities and labour market efficiency.
Kale, a former Statistician General of the National Bureau of Statistics made this known on Tuesday while speaking via zoom during the National skills and Industry Alignment Roundtable Q2 Series on the Role of Data in Job Creation, Coordination and Linkages held in Abuja.
He stressed that Nigeria’s demographic dividend, with 70 per cent of its population under 30, presents both an opportunity and a challenge, requiring quality education, economic absorption capacity, and strong institutions.
Kale highlighted the need for a coordinated data architecture to align skills with economic opportunities, enhance productivity, and foster long-term economic competitiveness.
He pointed out that nations that have achieved sustained economic transformation did not do so because they possess natural resources or lack of religion, they succeeded because they were able to systematically align their human capital systems with the evolving needs of the economy.
Kale emphasised that one of the defined characteristics of today’s most competitive economies was not simply the quality of the labour, but the quality of the information system that underpins that labour development and labour market.
He stated: “Across Nigeria today, we have employers that are searching for skill, and at precisely the same time, millions of Nigerians are searching for opportunities they can access. Our educational institutions continue to graduate thousands of young people every year.
“Yet businesses across multiple sectors in the country report persistence shortages in critical technical, vocational, political.
“So across the country, so employers are searching, workers are searching, training institutions are searching, policy makers are searching, investors are searching.
“The problem, however, is that they are often searching independent rather than collectively, and I think that’s what we’re looking at.
“The information that should connect them remains fragmented across different platforms, across different databases, across areas of the institution system opportunities that should be visible as a result, remaining skills that should be matched remain under its value, and investment that should create jobs often struggle to find the talents.”
On his part, Special Adviser to the Vice President on Workforce Development, Rimam Nuhu said the National Council of Skills aims at creating evidence-based policy for skills development in Nigeria to address skills mismatches and shortages.
He noted that the council would use a new database to identify the gaps and improve workforce planning, enhancing national productivity.
Nuhu noted: “What this does with this database is that it provides government with evidence-based recommendations, when it comes to policy regarding skills development. Skills development is an input for job creation.
“Currently, there are a lot of skills mismatches, there are a lot of skills shortages, and what this database will do is that it will give us the intelligence required for us to identify where exactly those shortages are.
“It will help us to plan, do better workforce planning, and then ultimately that contributes to the economy being more productive.
“Some people will tell you that we don’t have a skills shortage, which is quite controversial, but then others will tell you that we have a skills mismatch problem, another problem is that Nigerians, we’re not as productive as we should, right.
“So, this database will help us to be more productive and have better targeted policy making regarding skills development and eventually self-creation.”
Also, Strategic Partnership Lead, Office of the Vice President, Afolabi Imokhuede explained that the goal is to strengthen existing systems rather than create new policies, ensuring data is used to benefit Nigerians and employers
Imokhued added: “Data from various sources, including administrative and labour data, exists in silos, hindering effective policy making.
“The roundtable, part of a series, emphasizes the need to translate data into intelligence to forecast labor market demands and support industrialisation and competitiveness.”
