Home News Unemployed youth in Jordan eye a career path forward: Local politics

Unemployed youth in Jordan eye a career path forward: Local politics

0


Thousands of candidates ran for local office across Jordan Tuesday. A few dozen stood out: candidates in their 20s, all unemployed university graduates in outer provinces. That is the exact demographic that has borne the brunt of the kingdom’s economic crisis.

While unemployment hovers around 24% nationwide, unemployment among those under 30 is at 50%. University graduates spend years, even a decade or more, without work.

Why We Wrote This

As dispiriting as the economy has been for young Jordanians, the lack of policy solutions for their plight has been more so. With newly acquired skills, some have identified political office as a way forward.

“Their parents have spent all their savings and resources to send them to university, and they are stuck at home unable to start their own lives,” says Amer Al Sabaileh, a Jordanian analyst. “If we can encourage youths to take part in local politics, it will reflect positively on the society as a whole.”

Many of those running for office filled their years waiting for jobs with workshops and paid internships to enhance their employability.

“I have these skills, I have some experience, and I have many solutions to improve my community. Why shouldn’t I enter politics?” says Nour Alawamreh, an agricultural engineer who ran for office hoping to upgrade the local health center and scale up her forestation project to reduce flash flooding.

“Just to know that we can take part in the political process, that is the first step toward change.”

MLEIH and LIB, Jordan

In Ahmed Al Qubeilat’s village of Mleih in central Jordan, unemployment is a fact of life, especially for the young.

His cousins are jobless. So too is his neighbor, who holds a Ph.D. in medicine. Mr. Qubeilat has not found work since graduating with a B.A. in business administration in 2019.

Yet he now subscribes to the mantra that if you need a job – or a job done – do it yourself. He ran for local office.

Why We Wrote This

As dispiriting as the economy has been for young Jordanians, the lack of policy solutions for their plight has been more so. With newly acquired skills, some have identified political office as a way forward.

“Now is the time to break the cycle and get involved,” the 27-year-old candidate says outside an election tent next to his home. “No one is more capable in addressing my generation’s challenges than we are.”

Jordan’s local elections this week featured something unexpected: a surge of unemployed young people who feel neglected by the political system running for office to create change themselves.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here