Mallam Sanusi stated this in Calabar, Cross River State, in a lecture
titled Employment Skills, Values, Opportunities and Challenges of
University Graduating Students at the annual University of Calabar
lecture series.
He noted that with the expanding opportunities for university
education in Nigeria, which are without corresponding increase in job
openings, the unemployment situation in Nigeria can only get worse.
Increase
“From five Universities in the ’60s, the number has increased to over
100 and about 96 polytechnics and 47 monotechnics as at 2012.
Concomitantly, students enrolment has also
been increasing
significantly. In 2006 and 2007, the total enrolment in higher
institutions in Nigeria stood at 12.37 million and 1.98 respectively,”
he said.
He said that acquisition of knowledge had replaced the possession of
natural resources in driving development equation world over and that
any country that lagged behind in knowledge acquisition could not make
commensurate progress compared to other countries.
Sanusi explained that changing trends in the global economy were
knowledge based and driven by advances in information and communication
technology, which had significantly raised the stakes in the labour
market.
Knowledge
“Knowledge has become an important factor propelling growth in the
world economy today and as a matter of fact, natural resources are
increasingly becoming less important in the development equation.”
He said that employers demand for graduates, who are not only
technically knowledgeable in their chosen fields but have what he called
complementary life skills to deliver the highest possible value to
organisations.
Vice Chancellor of the University of Calabar, Prof. James Epoke, on
his part, said the University had embraced the Power Intervention
Programme of the CBN and called for assistance from the apex bank.
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