By Florence Faida
Inside the lively corridors of Uganda Christian University (UCU)’s School of Business, students move with optimism and ambition. But beyond the lecture rooms, a darker reality looms: Uganda’s worsening graduate unemployment crisis.
With an estimated 600,000 young people entering the labour market each year, a new study by a UCU postgraduate student has raised fresh questions about whether university programmes are equipping graduates with the skills and mindset needed to secure meaningful work.
The study, conducted by Gladys Nakato, a master’s graduate in , examines how education programmes, skills development, and mindset collectively shape graduate employability. Her dissertation, “Exploration of Education Programs, Skills Development and Mindset on Graduate Unemployment in Uganda”, focuses on UCU’s School of Business.
Nakato found that although many graduates complete university with strong academic qualifications, they face a job market that demands far more than theoretical knowledge.
“Traditional teaching methods still dominate. Lecturers focus on theory and examinations. There’s little emphasis on critical thinking, problem-solving, and real-world application,” Nakato noted.
This disconnect leaves graduates struggling with teamwork, communication, digital literacy, and practical experience and skills employers say are increasingly essential.
Universities, she observed, acknowledge this gap but are slow to implement reforms due to limited funding, outdated curricula, and weak industry partnerships.
Nakato’s research also highlights the growing importance of soft skills. Beyond technical knowledge, employers now demand communication, leadership, emotional intelligence, adaptability, and initiative.
Her findings show that while internships, mentorship, and extracurricular activities are critical in shaping employability, many students treat them casually as mere academic requirements rather than learning opportunities.
“Education without the right mindset is like a vehicle without fuel,” Nakato said, emphasising the role of resilience, proactiveness, and lifelong learning in navigating the job market.
During her research at UCU, Nakato interacted with students and recent graduates who shared their frustrations.
Pauline Nabalayo, a 24-year-old marketing graduate, said she felt unprepared for the workplace.
“I learnt a lot in class, but when I applied for internships and jobs, I realised I didn’t have the practical skills or confidence employers wanted,” she said.
Another graduate, Samuel Bukenya, criticised the limited career guidance at universities.
“We never had workshops on how to market ourselves. The focus was on exams and grades, not preparing for employment,” he said.
Their experiences mirror the wider challenges Nakato’s study points out.
Nakato argues that resolving graduate unemployment demands coordinated action from universities, government, and the private sector.
She also commended initiatives like the Youth Livelihood Programme but urged policymakers to align them with education reforms “to support complete education for a complete person.”
As thousands of young Ugandans continue to struggle on the job market, Nakato’s study offers a timely reminder: addressing graduate unemployment requires more than producing degree holders. It requires transforming attitudes, skills, and the education system itself.
For many like Pauline and Samuel, these changes cannot come soon enough.
If stakeholders work together to modernise education and cultivate a growth-oriented mindset, Nakato believes Uganda’s unemployment challenge could shift from a national crisis to a springboard for innovation.
“Skills beat paper,” her study concludes. “The world rewards not what people know but what they can do.”

