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70% of Pakistan’s female engineering graduates out of workforce: survey

muhammadhafeezmalik

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70% of Pakistan’s female engineering graduates out of workforce: survey​

59.2% of female engineering graduates in urban regions are out of labour force, reveals PRIDE-Gallup survey




News Desk October 24, 2023


file photo express tribune

FILE PHOTO: Express Tribune

A comprehensive analysis of the Labour Force Survey 2020-21, conducted jointly by Gallup Pakistan and PRIDE, has unveiled a disheartening reality for female engineering graduates in Pakistan. Shockingly, an overwhelming 70% of these highly qualified individuals find themselves either unemployed or outside the labour force.

Out of a total of 28,920 female engineering graduates, only 8,146, which account for approximately 28%, are currently employed. The remaining 6,054, or 20.9%, are grappling with unemployment, while a staggering 14,720, making up 50.9%, are not actively participating in the labour force, according to the research findings.

These alarming statistics paint a concerning picture for Pakistan, which stands as the fifth most populous country in the world. The demand for qualified engineers is undeniably high, even though the government has invested billions of rupees in subsidising public sector universities, particularly in the fields of medicine and engineering.

The research, which extensively utilised data from the Labour Force Survey 2020-21, focused on female engineering graduates, including those who have earned degrees at various levels, such as Bachelors, MS/MSc, MPhil, or PhD, across different engineering fields.

Read More: Women VCs call for inclusion in decision-making

The data was meticulously analysed and categorised into three distinct groups: employed, unemployed, and those who are out of the labour force. It was also broken down based on regional disparities, with a clear distinction between rural and urban areas.

The findings highlighted that 21.1% of all female engineering graduates reside in rural regions, while the majority, 78.9%, are concentrated in urban areas. Within rural regions, 43.9% of female engineering graduates are employed, 36.3% are unemployed, and 19.8% are not participating in the labour force—considerably lower than the national average of 50.9%.


In urban areas, the data indicated that approximately 24.0% of female engineering graduates are employed, while 16.8% are unemployed. Alarmingly, the majority, 59.2%, in urban areas have chosen to remain out of the labour force.

The regional disparity in employment opportunities was evident, with urban areas presenting significantly higher opportunities at 67.2%, compared to rural areas at 32.8%. However, the unemployment rate was lower in rural areas at 36.5% compared to 63.5% in urban areas. Regarding the total number of engineering graduates out of the labour force (14,720), 91.8% were in urban areas, with the remaining 8.2% in rural regions.

Another significant aspect highlighted by the research is the marital status of these female engineering graduates. A notable 64.2% of those not participating in the labour force were married, while 28.42% had never been married.

Read More: Doctors-scarce Pakistan has 35% unemployed female doctors

Bilal Gilani, the Executive Director at Gallup Pakistan, stressed that the situation where a large proportion of trained and educated females remain unemployed or disengaged from work is a critical issue requiring serious dialogue and attention in Pakistan. He emphasised that only 3 in 10 female engineers are currently employed, while 7 in 10 are not working.

Gilani further expressed concern about the substantial government investment in subsidising education for these female graduates, stating that if they are not working, it renders the government's investment a sunk cost. He urged policymakers and taxpayers to take notice of this issue, considering the financial implications for a resource-constrained country like Pakistan.

Dr Umer Khalid, Director of PRIDE, pointed out that a significant number of female engineering graduates opt to stay out of the labour force, particularly in urban areas and among the married population. This trend may be indicative of a societal inclination towards acquiring professional education to enhance marriage prospects.

He urged the government to reassess the allocation of seats in public sector engineering colleges and universities to ensure value for money.

The survey collected data from nearly 99,900 households across Pakistan, providing district-level representative results for the first time.

 
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bro, what are you talking about
70% of the entire youngsters with engineering degrees are out of the workforce.
The only ones that have jobs are the serving and retired bojhis.
 
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bro, what are you talking about
70% of the entire youngsters with engineering degrees are out of the workforce.
The only ones that have jobs are the serving and retired bojhis.

There were 50K unemployed engineers in 2019, which was increased to 100k in 2022 out of .26 million registered with Pakistan Engineering Council.
 
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@muhammadhafeezmalik

Since the throughput of engg colleges wouldnt have gone down, I suppose the number of unemployed engineers will keep increasing by about 30-40K per year, I suppose?

Regards
 
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bro, what are you talking about
70% of the entire youngsters with engineering degrees are out of the workforce.
The only ones that have jobs are the serving and retired bojhis.
They should immediately leave the country. Simple.
 
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@muhammadhafeezmalik

Since the throughput of engg colleges wouldnt have gone down, I suppose the number of unemployed engineers will keep increasing by about 30-40K per year, I suppose?

Regards

Pakistan produces about 25K engineers every year, this year more software engineers were produced than conventional mechanical, electrical or civil engineers combined. This year more engineers got job than the production, in country or out of country.
 
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Thanks, that was helpful. Hopefully with the Loin of Punjab as PM, economy will do better and more engineering jobs will be created.

Regards
 
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Thanks, that was helpful. Hopefully with the Loin of Punjab as PM, economy will do better and more engineering jobs will be created.

Regards

PMLN has different ideology than PTI, PMLN believe prosperity will come after improving infrastructure, PTI believe that we can prosper without improving infrastructure (قومیں سڑکوں سے نہیں بنتیں) "Nations are not built by roads", PTI comes up with more socialist agenda, PMLN is more about capitalism.
 
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I thought rishta aunties were looking for Doctor bahu's not Engineer bahu's?
 
. . .
Pakistan is Broken Country folks

It was a false promise and Broken dream , and a Lie for Past 70 years

The Human Resource which is crème of crop is leaving going to Americas/Europe and Middle east

Engineering Degree , means you are
  • Building Dams
  • Building Roads
  • Building Infrastructure
  • Building Homes
  • Building Buildings/Condos
  • Building bridges to solve traffic congestion
  • Building farming Solution
  • Building Cars
  • Designing the Structure of Car and Parts
  • Designing Solution to Irrigate Farming Land
  • Building Canals

When talented Youth can't get jobs locally they end up making a Shop or Theela selling French Fries on Streets I have seen videos , Unable to get jobs yes they create a small shop on street , but they have 4 year University Degree with Gold medal

I have never Met a Handyman , Pakistani Women
I have never met a Women who is a mechanic from Pakistan
I have never met a Women who builds roofs or walls , from Pakistan
I have never met a women building raw road , on streets from Pakistan
I have never met women building wall of home from Pakistan (Villages women do lot of wall /roof setup without education)

This is my personal Opinion

Unsure which Career Counselor was advising these students to Pick a Field of Science where they have 0% Potential to generate income

Unless PAF hires 30,000 Women Engineers
  • Have the 30,000 Female Engineer design the next JF17 Thunder
  • Or design a water distribution system to solve problems related to water in Pakistan


But such vision is not possible because we have Grade 11 Pass Military folks Head of Corporations in Country



Segment Pakistani Women are successful
  • Textile , design creation
  • Hand crafting
  • Carpet manufacturing by hand
  • Working in Marketing Departments
  • Working in Banking sector , working with Financial Excel data
  • Programming (Pressure from Parents to do programming)
  • Being Doctors
  • Being Nurses
  • Being Dentist
  • Leading Foreign Corporations overseas as CEO/CFO/CMO/GM
  • Running Restaurants Management / Labor
  • Hospitality Sector / Hotel
  • Some venture into Police/Army (The police has lost all credibility in last 3 years so you can imagine how people view women in Police force now)
 
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70% of Pakistan’s female engineering graduates out of workforce: survey​

59.2% of female engineering graduates in urban regions are out of labour force, reveals PRIDE-Gallup survey




News Desk October 24, 2023


file photo express tribune

FILE PHOTO: Express Tribune

A comprehensive analysis of the Labour Force Survey 2020-21, conducted jointly by Gallup Pakistan and PRIDE, has unveiled a disheartening reality for female engineering graduates in Pakistan. Shockingly, an overwhelming 70% of these highly qualified individuals find themselves either unemployed or outside the labour force.

Out of a total of 28,920 female engineering graduates, only 8,146, which account for approximately 28%, are currently employed. The remaining 6,054, or 20.9%, are grappling with unemployment, while a staggering 14,720, making up 50.9%, are not actively participating in the labour force, according to the research findings.

These alarming statistics paint a concerning picture for Pakistan, which stands as the fifth most populous country in the world. The demand for qualified engineers is undeniably high, even though the government has invested billions of rupees in subsidising public sector universities, particularly in the fields of medicine and engineering.

The research, which extensively utilised data from the Labour Force Survey 2020-21, focused on female engineering graduates, including those who have earned degrees at various levels, such as Bachelors, MS/MSc, MPhil, or PhD, across different engineering fields.

Read More: Women VCs call for inclusion in decision-making

The data was meticulously analysed and categorised into three distinct groups: employed, unemployed, and those who are out of the labour force. It was also broken down based on regional disparities, with a clear distinction between rural and urban areas.

The findings highlighted that 21.1% of all female engineering graduates reside in rural regions, while the majority, 78.9%, are concentrated in urban areas. Within rural regions, 43.9% of female engineering graduates are employed, 36.3% are unemployed, and 19.8% are not participating in the labour force—considerably lower than the national average of 50.9%.


In urban areas, the data indicated that approximately 24.0% of female engineering graduates are employed, while 16.8% are unemployed. Alarmingly, the majority, 59.2%, in urban areas have chosen to remain out of the labour force.

The regional disparity in employment opportunities was evident, with urban areas presenting significantly higher opportunities at 67.2%, compared to rural areas at 32.8%. However, the unemployment rate was lower in rural areas at 36.5% compared to 63.5% in urban areas. Regarding the total number of engineering graduates out of the labour force (14,720), 91.8% were in urban areas, with the remaining 8.2% in rural regions.

Another significant aspect highlighted by the research is the marital status of these female engineering graduates. A notable 64.2% of those not participating in the labour force were married, while 28.42% had never been married.

Read More: Doctors-scarce Pakistan has 35% unemployed female doctors

Bilal Gilani, the Executive Director at Gallup Pakistan, stressed that the situation where a large proportion of trained and educated females remain unemployed or disengaged from work is a critical issue requiring serious dialogue and attention in Pakistan. He emphasised that only 3 in 10 female engineers are currently employed, while 7 in 10 are not working.

Gilani further expressed concern about the substantial government investment in subsidising education for these female graduates, stating that if they are not working, it renders the government's investment a sunk cost. He urged policymakers and taxpayers to take notice of this issue, considering the financial implications for a resource-constrained country like Pakistan.

Dr Umer Khalid, Director of PRIDE, pointed out that a significant number of female engineering graduates opt to stay out of the labour force, particularly in urban areas and among the married population. This trend may be indicative of a societal inclination towards acquiring professional education to enhance marriage prospects.

He urged the government to reassess the allocation of seats in public sector engineering colleges and universities to ensure value for money.

The survey collected data from nearly 99,900 households across Pakistan, providing district-level representative results for the first time.


what % of their male counterparts are unemployed ? I heard from Pakistani friend that some Pakistani women get medical degrees for doctors and do not practice medicine after marriage.
 
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Female Doctors do Practice and quite routinely have Private Clinics

My family has women working and practicing in Medicine

Very common to find , private dentist clinic
Private Doctor Clinics for Females and Children Patients
Active as Nurse

If anyone decides not to practice perhaps the Husband has a very well to do Job so they don't have need for both parents to work


It should be responsibility of Education Minister or Councilor to guide Students which fields to pick for Education , if there are no Engineering Companies in Pakistan which hire /use women why offer that branch of Science ???

Learn something you will use in Life to make world a better place if we have Engineering Jobs culture for Women by all means go study that for 4 year



What is our Education Minister doing?

  • Well of course they would be more interested in their Property Building and Increasing the collection of Luxury cars
 
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