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    Home»Opinion»Blueprint for National Transformation | Series Seven: Nigeria’s Credential Crisis: Dismantling the Unemployability Factory _ By Amofin Beulah Adeoye
    Opinion

    Blueprint for National Transformation | Series Seven: Nigeria’s Credential Crisis: Dismantling the Unemployability Factory _ By Amofin Beulah Adeoye

    Khalid ImranBy Khalid ImranDecember 11, 2025No Comments401 Views
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    There is a statistical tragedy unfolding in Nigeria, one so steady and unrelenting that it threatens to turn our demographic dividend into an expensive national liability. We have built a country that celebrates the mere production of credentials, confusing the mass printing of certificates with the cultivation of human capability. The result is a machinery that hums without progress — a nation whose wheels spin in place while its young people stand helpless beside them. Man and machine stare at each other in stalemate, and the country pretends, arms akimbo, that the standstill is motion.

    This credential crisis does not erupt loudly. It seeps in through quiet disorder: through examination halls where invigilators look away, through colleges where lecturers trade grades to survive, through ministries where policy is drafted unanchored to evidence, and through the fragile hopes of students who believe they are acquiring an education when all they are receiving is processed paperwork. What emerges at the end of this conveyor belt is not a pipeline of talent but a factory of unemployability—issuing certificates that promise ascension but deliver stagnation.

    The disintegration begins in the secondary school classroom. Underpaid teachers, burdened by bloated timetables and classrooms swollen beyond capacity, are expected to prepare students for national exams whose reliability has become increasingly brittle. WAEC’s results show that in most years only about half of candidates secure credits in five core subjects including mathematics and English. Specifically, out of over 1.9million candidates that sat for WASSCE in 2025, only 62 per cent passed with credit including English Language and Mathematics, NECO’s records trace the same pattern. These are not episodic failings. They are a diagnosis. A majority of students are not meeting the basic cognitive thresholds for further education or skilled work, yet the system moves them along as though progression were synonymous with preparation.

    JAMB’s annual admissions data sharpens the indictment. More than a million candidates routinely compete for far fewer tertiary slots. But scarcity is not the scandal. The scandal is that many candidates cannot meet the minimum score for their chosen fields. What we label a competition for admission is often a struggle for comprehension — evidence of a curriculum that does not build, teaching that does not take root, and oversight bodies that operate in isolation. The bottleneck is not simply numeric; it is intellectual.

    And then there is the quiet fracture we have learned to normalise: the catchment area doctrine, a policy conceived to remedy regional inequity but now, in practice, institutionalising a new form of educational asymmetry. Year after year, candidates who score far below standard cut-offs are admitted on the basis that their states are “educationally less developed.” In the same faculty, in the same classroom, in the same lecture theatre, Nigeria runs two standards under one roof — one leg of gold and the other of clay on the same edifice. The nation pretends this building stands on principle, yet it tilts precariously, burdened by uneven foundations, and begins to crumble before our eyes. Still, we whitewash the cracks and call the structure the giant of Africa.

    Those who do make it into the NCE and polytechnic tiers often arrive already academically undernourished. Colleges of education — designed as the fulcrum of national teacher training — admit students who themselves battled with the very subjects they are being prepared to teach. And so the cycle continues: weak learners become weak teachers who return to breed another generation of fragile learning. Polytechnics, envisioned as the engines of Nigeria’s industrial and technical workforce, operate with outdated tools, skeletal funding, and a prestige hierarchy that punishes practical paths. Employers consistently report that graduates of these programmes require extensive retraining before they can perform basic tasks. Industry has quietly adjusted by building its own boot camps to compensate for the deficits of the formal system.

    These statistics acquire flesh and heartbeat in the lived realities of Nigerian youth. A teenager in Lagos sits for JAMB three times, believing persistence will open a door that pedagogy has never equipped her to approach. A young man in Kano buys a guaranteed “clean result” from a WAEC-NECO syndicate, only to live in the shadow of a certificate he cannot defend. A Polytechnic lecturer in the South East region, who teaches engineering with equipment older than the faculty buildings, and a trainee teacher in Kaduna admits she has never solved a quadratic equation alone yet is weeks away from being authorised to teach it.

    This unemployability factory did not emerge out of chaos. It is the legacy of decades of policy inertia, a system where reform is announced in communiqués but never implemented in classrooms. The labour market has absorbed the consequences. Employers, both multinational and local, describe job applicants who struggle with basic numeracy, comprehension, digital literacy and problem-solving — deficits that originate in primary school but bloom fully at the point of employment. This is not a labour market problem that happens to involve education. It is an educational crisis metastasising through the economy.

    Yet dismantling this factory does not require impossible feats or new bureaucracies. Three reforms, implementable nationwide within a single policy cycle, could fundamentally redirect the system. The first is a unified baseline competency audit linking WAEC, NECO and JAMB outcomes with teacher-training benchmarks. Such transparency would force alignment across the pipeline and compel ministries to adjust curricula based on real performance data rather than institutional pride. By mapping student failure rates back to specific training institutions, we can identify and remediate the source of the rot rather than simply blaming the fruit.

    The second reform is a radical renewal of national teaching capacity. This involves raising NCE admission thresholds to realistic levels, demanding independent assessments for lecturer retraining and promotion, and breaking the cycle of low competence reproducing low competence. We must treat the teaching profession not as a holding bay for the unemployed, but as the primary engine of national intelligence. This requires a wage structure that attracts the best minds, coupled with a performance framework that swiftly exits those who cannot teach what they do not know.

    The third reform is a labour-anchored restructuring of polytechnic education. This requires industry-validated annual updates to curricula and federal funding tied not to enrolment numbers but to demonstrable graduate competence. We must stop funding polytechnics based on how many students they admit and start funding them based on how many graduates gain meaningful employment. This shift incentivizes institutions to partner with the private sector, ensuring that the skills taught in the lecture hall are the skills required on the factory floor.

    A country cannot grow faster than the minds it cultivates. Nigeria’s potential is immense, but potential is only latent energy until a system equips its citizens to convert it into productivity. The factories of unemployability are not hidden: they stand in classrooms without resources, in exam systems without integrity, in training colleges without rigour and in policies without urgency. But they can be dismantled. And when they are, the nation will discover that what looked like a talent shortage was simply the predictable harvest of a system that never gave its children a fair chance to learn. And where they turned up to learn, they were all taken, teacher and student alike – and we are still looking for them.

    About the Author:

    Amofin Beulah Adeoye is a legal and financial expert with international recognition for his work in forensic accounting, governance, and philanthropy. A First Class Law graduate from the University of Ibadan and a certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) and Associate Chartered Accountant (ACA), he previously served as Financial Advisory Partner at Deloitte & Touche West Africa, where he led forensic services until his withdrawal in August 2024 to become active in political and community development efforts in Nigeria, for which he now has significant following and has received both local and international awards for his contributions. He maintains affiliations with multinationals across Europe, Asia, the US, and Africa spanning sectors such as healthcare, financial services, energy, logistics, and real estate. Adeoye is actively engaged with the Nigerian diaspora, and has facilitated strategic dialogues with community stakeholders across the globe and leads several philanthropic initiatives through the Beulah Adeoye Foundation.

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