As a Master's student in Economics at Tribhuvan University, I often analyze data that shows Nepal is currently sitting on a golden opportunity. With nearly 62% of the population in the working-age group (15–59 years), the country has one of the highest potentials for a demographic dividend in its history [1].
Every day as an education counselor, I meet talented, motivated young people who are full of potential but remain underemployed or unemployed. The main reason is not a lack of degrees — but a serious mismatch between the skills they possess and the skills the market demands.
Many graduates come out with strong theoretical knowledge
but lack effective communication and presentation skills, digital literacy and
personal branding abilities, practical problem-solving and adaptability, and
knowledge of emerging tools like AI and professional networking platforms.
This skills gap is preventing us from fully utilizing our
demographic dividend. Instead of becoming a driver of growth, our large youth
population risks turning into a demographic burden — leading to higher
unemployment, brain drain, frustration, and migration for low-skilled jobs
abroad.
The Clock is Ticking: Understanding the Data
The National Population and Housing Census 2021 revealed a striking reality: Nepal's working-age population has reached an unprecedented 61.96% [1]. Furthermore, the country has achieved a replacement-level fertility rate of 2.1, meaning the dependency ratio is declining [2]. Demographers estimate that this "demographic window of opportunity" will remain open for the next 40 to 60 years [2].
However, this window is not a guarantee of prosperity; it is merely a potential. Currently, nearly 700,000 Nepalese leave the country annually in search of foreign employment, primarily heading to Gulf countries for manual labor [3]. While their remittances contribute significantly to the GDP, this mass exodus of youth highlights a systemic failure to create viable domestic opportunities or equip them for high-skilled global roles.
The government has recognized this challenge and initiated
several programs, though execution remains a hurdle. The Prime Minister
Employment Program (PMEP) was launched to ensure minimum employment and provide
social protection, though it has faced criticism regarding its long-term
effectiveness and sustainability [4].
More promising are initiatives focused on technical and
vocational education. The Council for Technical Education and Vocational
Training (CTEVT), supported by international partners like the Swiss Agency for
Development and Cooperation through the "QualiTY" project, aims to
train 48,000 youth and accredit TVET schools by 2026 [3].
Furthermore, the government is looking toward the future with the Digital Nepal Framework and the newly drafted National Artificial Intelligence Policy 2082 (2025). The AI policy ambitiously aims to train 5,000 AI professionals within five years and establish AI excellence centers across all seven provinces [5].
|
Initiative |
Primary Focus |
Target / Goal |
|
CTEVT QualiTY Project |
Vocational Training |
Train 48,000 youth and 1,000 teachers by 2026 [3] |
|
National AI Policy 2025 |
Digital Skilling |
Train 5,000 AI professionals in 5 years [5] |
|
Digital Nepal Framework |
Digital Infrastructure |
Implement AI-supported learning in 10,000 schools [6] |
Bridging the Gap in the Digital Generation
In today's digital economy, the solution to our skills gap lies in embracing technology and remote work. We do not necessarily need to build thousands of physical factories to employ our youth; the internet is the new factory floor.
1. Fostering a Freelance and Remote Work Culture Digital marketing, coding, graphic design, and content moderation are highly sought-after skills globally. By equipping students with these digital skills, they can participate in the global gig economy from their homes in Kathmandu or rural Terai. This not only prevents brain drain but brings foreign currency directly into the local economy.
2. Integrating Digital Literacy into Core Curricula The government's plan to make digital literacy compulsory up to Grade 12 is a step in the right direction [6]. However, this must go beyond basic computer operations. Students need to learn how to leverage AI tools, build personal brands on platforms like LinkedIn, and navigate the complexities of the digital workspace.
3. Public-Private Partnerships for Bootcamps Looking at global best practices, countries like Vietnam have successfully accelerated their digital transformation through youth-led projects and public-private partnerships [7]. Nepal should encourage private IT training institutes and NGOs to run intensive, career-oriented bootcamps that focus on practical, market-ready skills rather than just theoretical degrees.
Economics teaches us that human capital is the real engine
of growth. If we invest wisely in upgrading the quality of our workforce —
especially in communication, digital skills, and career readiness — Nepal can
still turn this demographic window into a success story.
We must shift our mindset from "exporting manual labor" to "exporting digital services and skilled professionals." If our youth must go abroad, let them go as highly paid nurses, engineers, and IT specialists, not just as unskilled laborers.
The coming decade is critical. As students, counselors, educators, and policymakers, we all have a role to play in bridging this gap before the opportunity slips away.
What do you think? Is Nepal doing enough to prepare its youth for the future? Share your views in the comments!
[1] Central Bureau of Statistics, Nepal. "National
Population and Housing Census 2021." Government of Nepal. https://censusnepal.cbs.gov.np/results/files/result-folder/National%20Report_English.pdf
government need to act, not only make policies and talk only in papers
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