The Hypocrisy Of Telling Jobless Youth To Create Their Own Employment Stinks To High Heavens

In the past few weeks, the nation has watched with disgust, helplessness, and hopelessness as some civil servants and corporate leaders tell the Kenyan jobless youth to create their own employment.
Some civil servants, like the Cabinet Secretary for Youth and Gender, have had the audacity to say that young people should stop being lazy and create their own jobs.
The irony is, some of these individuals, including Ezekiel Mutua, the CEO of Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB), are employed and have never been self-employed in all their lives.
They know that if they resigned from their position (as employees), they would not be able to run a single simple business in Kenya and make a living.
The hypocrisy of those calling unemployed youth lazy and telling them to create jobs stinks to the high heavens and should be condemned and reality is made known to them.
Our so-called leaders seem to be living in their own imaginary world where free jobs for young people flourishes.
It reminds me of the French Revolution. In one of the most famous quotes in history, when Marie Antoinette, the bride to France’s King Louis XVI, in 1789, was told that her subject had no bread because of the cost of living, she sniffed and said, “if they cannot afford bread, let them eat cake.” These are our Kenyan leaders today.
The same people who are telling the young unemployed youth to create their own jobs are the same people who are looted the past, looting the present and the future of this country.
According to Kenya’s Auditor General Edward Ouko, a whopping 3.5 billion shillings meant for Uwezo Fund, a fund that is supposed to help Kenyans among them the youth, disappeared in the pockets of few individuals.
You may or may not have heard of the Youth Fund and what became of it. Angry and hungry hyenas were appointed to head the fund, they looted the funds meant for the youth to the ground.
Unemployment Rate
The unemployment rate in Kenya stands at 43.5 percent. This is the truth that the government doesn’t want Kenyans to know.
Through the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics, they insist the unemployment rate is still below 12.5 percent.
The employment absorption rate in this country is less than 2 percent. This indicates that for every 100 Kenyans that are graduating from institutions of higher learning, only two lucky ones are likely to get employed.
The Jubilee government, that has been in power for 7 years now, promised that it would create more than 300,000 jobs for Kenyans annually. The promise remained a campaign slogan and died as soon as they were elected.
During the year, the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) had the courage to come up with a report that indicated that more than 800,000 jobs had been created in the year 2018 alone.
Kenyans protested. Statehouse took credit for the jobs when it was evident that there was no single job that had been created. They are still running around like indotyphlops braminus trying to show the jobs they created.
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The SME Sector
Those telling young to start a business, while themselves depend on employment, should be as