The World Bank has sounded the alarm: millions of young people in Pakistan and other developing countries could be left without jobs in the next 10 to 15 years and the window to act is closing.
This warning did not come quietly. It was raised during high-level talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), one of the world’s most powerful financial institutions. When organizations like these speak together, it is a signal that the problem is serious and that it needs urgent attention.
- 1.2B Young people expected to enter the workforce soon.
- 10-15 Years before the job shortage reaches its peak.
- 100s M People at risk of staying in poverty without reform.
So, what exactly is the problem?
Simply put: too many young people, too few jobs. Every year, millions of young men and women finish studies and start looking for work. But the number of available jobs is not growing fast enough to keep up. In countries like Pakistan, where the population is young and growing rapidly, this gap between job-seekers and job opportunities is becoming a crisis.
Ajay Banga, the President of the World Bank, made this crystal clear. He said that creating jobs is not just about economic growth, it is the single most powerful tool for reducing poverty. When people have decent, stable work, they can feed their families, send their children to school, and build better lives.
“Job creation is essential for reducing poverty. Without deliberate investment and reform, the gap between youth and opportunity will only widen.” Ajay Banga, World Bank President
Which sectors can create the most jobs?
The World Bank did not just highlight the problem, it also pointed to solutions. Officials stressed the need to invest strategically in sectors that can create large numbers of jobs quickly and sustainably.
- Energy
- Agriculture
- Tourism
- Healthcare
Pakistan, for instance, has enormous untapped potential in all four areas. Its agricultural land is vast but underproductive. Its northern regions and historical sites could attract millions of tourists. Its energy infrastructure needs rebuilding, creating thousands of skilled jobs in the process. And its healthcare system needs far more workers to serve a rapidly growing population.
Why reforms matter
Investment alone is not enough. The World Bank also called for structural reforms and changes to the rules, laws, and systems that govern how businesses operate and how workers are protected. Without these, even large amounts of foreign investment may not translate into real, lasting jobs for ordinary people.
Reforms could mean simplifying the process of starting a business, improving education so graduates have skills employers actually need, or building better roads and internet access so that rural communities can participate in the economy.
What does this mean for Pakistan’s youth?
Pakistan has one of the largest youth populations in the world. This is sometimes called a “demographic dividend” , a potential economic boom if young people can be educated, skilled, and employed. But if that potential is wasted, it can quickly become a demographic disaster: a generation of frustrated, unemployed young people with few prospects.
The next decade is critical. Choices made today about education, investment, and economic policy will determine whether Pakistan’s youth become its greatest asset or its greatest challenge.
