Algeria blighted by youth unemployment despite recovering oil prices
More than one in four Algerians under the age of 30 are unemployed in a
country that remains heavily reliant on exports of oil and gas
Unlike neighboring Tunisia or Morocco, Algeria has made little
headway in attracting foreign tourists, and foreign investors outside
the energy sector give it a wide berth
ALGIERS: Two years after graduating from university, Ali Lamir, 26, has
been spending his days sitting in a cafe in central Algiers thinking
about how to land a job.
He is not alone — more than one in four Algerians under the age of 30
are unemployed in a country that remains heavily reliant on exports of
oil and gas, despite numerous official promises of economic
diversification.
Economists see little prospect of improvement despite a recovery in
global oil prices. They have predicted that the government of veteran
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, 81, is likely to spend any increased
revenues on imports, not on job-creation initiatives.
“My university degree is of no use. I have been looking for a job for
two years but to no avail,” said Lamir, a graduate of the Algiers
Institute of Law and Administrative Sciences.
Unlike neighboring Tunisia or Morocco, Algeria has made little headway
in attracting foreign tourists, and foreign investors outside the energy
sector give it a wide berth, deterred by security concerns and
bureaucracy.
A scheme of interest-free loans, introduced two decades ago to encourage
young Algerians to start their own businesses, has not fulfilled early
hopes that it could boost the non-energy sector, which today accounts
for only 6 percent of exports.
“I have applied for jobs at many firms, but get nothing other than
promises. I am willing to accept any position even with a low salary,”
said 24-year-old Aziza Bari, a graduate in economics from Algiers
University.
Overall unemployment stood at 11.1 percent in the first quarter of 2018,
official data shows, but was 26.4 percent among the under-30s, who make
up more than two thirds of Algeria’s 41 million people.
Such figures do not make for happy reading for Bouteflika, who has been
in power since 1999 and is considering seeking a fifth term next year,
despite poor health.
The recovery in global oil prices led to a 15 percent increase in
Algeria’s oil and gas revenues in the first seven months of 2018 to $22
billion. Energy exports account for 95 percent of its foreign earnings.
Algeria has also gradually opened up industries such as food, home
appliances and mobile phones to private investors, helping the
non-energy sector to grow by 3.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 2017,
according to the most recent available data.
But business leaders have demanded bolder steps. “Our country is in need
of accelerating the transition movement to an economy of knowledge and
innovation,” Aliu Haddad, head of the country’s largest business
association Algerian Business Leaders Forum, told a conference.
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