After graduating from Sri Lanka¡¯s University of Kelaniya with a Bachelor of Arts in English and Literature, Tharuvi Nanayakkarawasam was eager to start her career and make her mark on the professional world.
¡°I wanted to enter the corporate world and slowly climb the ladder,¡± she explained.
Tharuvi¡¯s hopes are shared by hundreds of thousands of young women and men who enter the job market or pursue higher education with the goal of getting a good job. But as many of them are learning, getting a job is neither easy nor guaranteed.
ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº estimates that nearly one million young people will enter Sri Lanka¡¯s workforce over the next decade. Job creation won¡¯t keep pace with demand, as only 300,000 jobs are projected to be created in the same period.
At the same time, not everyone in the job market has the professional skills they need to succeed¡ªespecially in sectors like tourism, healthcare, research and information and communications technology. These sectors have high potential for employment and offer richer career opportunities and higher salaries.
In 2022, o were enrolled in university programs that equip students with the language, critical thinking and other skills that employers value. Enrollment in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM)¡ªwhich can qualify graduates for more specialized professions¡ªis particularly low. pursued degrees in STEM. Out of this number, studied STEM courses and more than half of this cohort chose to specialize in biological sciences over math, engineering and biotechnology.
Female graduates, who tend to pursue humanities and arts degrees, are at a particular disadvantage when it comes to competing for certain jobs. As Tharuvi confirms, ¡°When you're from the Faculty of Humanities there's this misconception that you won't be well equipped with technology or the needs that are required by the corporate world or the academia.¡±
Helping women and young people get AHEAD
Reforms to Sri Lanka¡¯s university programs are helping to build a skilled workforce that can help young women and men compete for the jobs of the future and position the country for growth in the global economy.
Launched in 2017, the World Bank-supported AHEAD program aimed to strengthen Sri Lanka¡¯s higher education sector by increasing its economic relevance and helping the country become a competitive middle-income economy through a three-part strategy: raising overall enrollment in higher education by improving degree programs essential for economic development, improving the quality of university education¡ªespecially in terms of its relevance to the labor market¡ªand promoting more innovation through partnerships between academia and industry.