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Unemployed graduates: Who prospers? Print E-mail
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Written by Dr. Lim Teck Ghee   
Wednesday, 28 October 2009 11:09
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Commentary by Dr Lim Teck Ghee

(Director, Centre for Policy Initiatives)

Najib Razak’s 2010 Budget is called ‘1Malaysia, Together we prosper’. Before the advent of the Prime Minister’s multi-million ringgit public relations sloganeering, his predecessor Abdullah Ahmad Badawi had already introduced the ‘Prosper’ theme.

Abdullah in his Oct 30, 2005 budget speech announced ‘Prosper’ or Projek Pembangunan Usahawan dalam Bidang Peruncitan to assist graduates venturing into business. Under Prosper, Perbadanan Usahawan Nasional Berhad (PUNB) would finance 200 graduates up to RM50,000 each; that easily amounts to RM10 million.

Prosper is an ongoing programme and this year, its attachment training will allow participants to intern in PUNB investee companies. The cost of ensuring this prosperity is, however, not open to public knowledge.

Nonetheless, the RM10 million allocated in Abdullah’s 2006 Budget is clearly a drop in the ocean compared to the RM700 million set aside in Najib’s March 10, 2009 mini budget. The latter’s stimulus package planned to create 163,000 training and job placement opportunities for retrenched workers and unemployed graduates.

Of this number, 50,000 will be absorbed into the civil service, adding to its already obese size and bloated payroll. It is important to note that under the RM191.5 billion 1Malaysia Budget, 72.2% is for operating expenditure, out of which RM42.2 billion is for emoluments. Furthermore next month, a “special financial contribution” (announced earlier) in the form of a year-end bonus totalling RM400 million will be paid to public sector employees from Grade 41 to Grade 54.

Khazanah – ‘treasuring’ human capital

It is true that other parts of the world are similarly facing the problem of workers getting laid off and school leavers unable to find jobs due to the depressed global economy.

However the numbers in Malaysia are simply staggering. Based on estimates, about 60,000 graduates might find it difficult to seek employment at all times, said Najib when launching the Graduate Employability Management Scheme (GEMS) on March 13, 2009.

Unemployed graduates 
Year
Numbers affected 
 2001-2002 10,000 (incl. diploma holders) 
 2008-2009 163,000 (incl. retrenched workers)

 

GEMS is run by Khazanah Nasional Berhad under the aegis of the Finance Ministry. The precursor to GEMS is the Graduate Employability Enhancement (GREEN) programme, also tasked to Khazanah in co-operation with GLCs.

We can safely assume that a proportion of these targeted graduates have not been able to find work in the fields in which they hold the requisite paper qualification. Meanwhile the government continues to fail to address the longstanding lack of relevance of the courses taught in the public universities and the low standards of graduates produced.

Instead of getting it right from the get-go through structural reform of the higher education system (and better still the entire schooling system), our authorities are attempting to fix the shortcomings of graduates who flounder in the competitive marketplace by pouring money to correct their mis-education.

It is all the more worrying when Khazanah’s director of strategic human capital management Azman Mohd Hussein reveals that the unemployed graduates have to be given remedial and practical training for a whole year to improve their communication skills and increase their level of confidence.

And similar to the ‘Prosper’ scenario, the public is not cognizant of Khazanah’s expenditure breakdown either.

Hitting rock bottom soon?

Something’s very wrong when the situation goes keeps getting from bad to worse with no light at the end of the tunnel.

Retraining for graduates and youth 
Year  ProgrammeEstimated cost (RM) 
 2001 Graduate Training Scheme 150 million
 2004-2005 Graduate Training Scheme 265.2 million
 2006 Khazanah – GREEN unknown
 2008 Najib stimulus package #1 600 million
 2009  Najib stimulus package #2700 million
 2009 Khazanah – GEMS unknown

* The outline table above is incomplete as information is unavailable in the public domain. 

 

As early as Sept 25, 2001, Dr Mahathir Mohamad, speaking from the Prime Minister’s Office had unveiled an economic stimulus package which earmarked RM150 million for 10,000 degree and diploma holders. This allowed them to learn IT, brush up on Mathematics and English, in addition to providing RM500 monthly allowances on a temporary basis until end-2002.

‘Temporary’ appears to have been a misplaced optimism because the chronic problem has persisted for nearly a decade now. Between January 2004 and June 2005 alone, the government’s human resources development fund paid out RM265.2 million in training grants to individuals.

From November 2001 until mid-2006, the Graduate Training Scheme had retrained almost 22,000 unemployed graduates, then Human Resources Minister Fong Chan Onn disclosed in his paper ‘Developing human capital’ delivered on Aug 21, 2006.

Nonetheless, on Dec 27, 2007 in a paper presented by the government-sponsored Institut Kefahaman Islam Malaysia, Ikim quoted a comment from the Human Resources Minister on the inadequate success rate of the retraining.

Ikim research officer Nor Hartini Saari said “roughly RM500 million” had been expended in retraining. “However, according to the Minister, only 1,400 graduates have been employed after participating in the aforementioned training scheme.”

Two years down the road on Oct 20, 2009, Higher Education Minister Mohd Khaled Nordin still talked about RM48 million spent in university partnerships with corporations “in strategic sectors that could improve innovation-based industries and guarantee graduates of job opportunities”.

Unless our public coffers are replenished by King Midas, the government may soon go broke from the ‘guarantees’.

It is just not sustainable to have the next generation depend on the nanny state even after they have been provided with ample tertiary education opportunities, with generous financial assistance and babysitting after graduation, and eventually bailouts every step of the way.

Raiding the public treasury

Various ministries and entrepreneurial agencies have set up their own graduate retraining programme and this makes the tracking of fiscal allocations difficult.

For example, the RM7 billion stimulus package revealed by Najib on Nov 4, 2008 allocated RM300 million for a skills training programme fund (with focus on tourism and “business process outsourcing sectors” among others); RM200 million for programmes by private training institutions and RM100 million for youth programmes at various levels – we see here three intersecting areas.

Then there is “another RM70 million to facilitate employment of retrenched employees and graduates seeking jobs,” a special allocation approved by Cabinet as announced by Human Resources Minister S. Subramaniam on Jan 21, 2009 in Putrajaya.

The aforementioned RM70 million could well be a tranche from the RM600 million-infusion for skills training under Najib’s RM7 billion package a year ago. Or then again, maybe not ... who knows. In any case, the RM600 million was augmented by another whopping RM700 million barely four months later under Najib’s second stimulus package.

When so many quarters are involved in the overlapping effort between government agencies, GLCs, and the private sector, only the ‘special committees’ established to manage the funds know the full details.

Even the Auditor-General’s office probably does not have the complete picture of how much money is being poured into remedying incompetence in the public universities. And what the results have been. If it does, it would be very important for the public accounts committee to put this information out in the public domain.

It may be argued that the fact that these public funds seem to be going towards so many ‘facilitators’ and ‘consultancy’ companies shows a primarily liberal and laissez-faire approach used by the government to tackle the problem.

Also of some relief is that no monopoly seems to have appeared in cornering the market.

The crush of agencies, ministries and private agents seeking participation in this fast-growing industry of “enhancing graduate employability” should reassure us that there are droves of Malaysians who are driven by patriotism to help our hapless graduates. The unkind amongst us may suspect that making a quick buck – or rather making buckets of bucks – is more the real motivation.

No solution in sight

Considering that many of our young adults are no surer of securing jobs after graduation today than they were in 2001 and three prime ministers ago, the public and the current undergraduate population have a right to demand a full accounting of the huge sums of tax payers’ money spent.

We also need to know the outcome of independent impact studies that can provide empirical data on how effective or ineffective this massive injection of public funds has been.

In the current Parliamentary debate taking place on the ‘1Malaysia, Together we prosper’ Budget, there needs to be an explanation on where the total RM1.3 billion appropriated over the mere span of the recent year for training and retraining purposes went to. And who has prospered from the money.
Comments (50)
  • charleskiwi  - charleskiwi

    Pariah Mahathir surely must have the answer, after all he came out with the NDP and all the pro-Malay policies that created all these problems !
    Please go and ask the pariah for the answers !
    After all he seems to have answers for all the problems including divine ones. He is able to transform from an Indian to a Malay and now his descendants is half way to become Chinese, may be even already there, to become a Chinese. A very spooky thought indeed, to have his tainted blood pollute that of the Chinese- please help prevent it from spreading this pollution and keep it in the sewage tank where it rightly belongs.
    He created the many problems without first looking at the consequences. His main aim of course was to distract the Malays from looking into his many corruption by allocating them crumbs under the NDP. How easy it is !
    Just like his look east policy when his actual aim is to prevent as many people as possible to visit Europe from meeting him there. Whereas without fail, yearly ,he would go on transit in London to somewhere in Europe to 'audit' his investments there.
    He knows no body has the authority to check on him while he is there on transit to ...where especially he is no longer in politics.
    When at his age he should be spending time with his grand children and his family, instead he goes to London why ?

  • Joe Ang  - Spi9neless human or..

    A nation with so many graduates without spine, what does the future hold for this country?

    When they should be given technical training, why send them to universities to study Islamic studies?

    Wouldn't it be more dignified if they do the work of many immigrants as electricians,plumbers, mechanics, welders?

    The whole education has got its priority wrong when it strive to create a heavy top.

    How can they get human resource planning and the allocation of resources so very wrong.

    It pains to even think about it.

  • Thomas

    it is sad that so many graduates are unemployed while we have like millions of foreign workers??

    if the graduates are desperate, they would not be picky, would they? i'd say, enough of coddling. they are graduates for goodness sake!! if high school leavers can make a living, there is no reason for people who are so privileged, to study when the others are joining the workforce at 18 to be further coddled. let them grow up. it is not called growing pains for no reasons!!

    as it is, even those in employment is under-employed. you have government servants who stare out of windows, who spends weeks attending meaningless and unproductive meetings, spending lots of money doing it and taking salary at the same time too!! even those toll collectors are sheer waste of human resources when automation should be 100% in this instance.

    all said and done, somebody somewhere just want to swindle some money!

  • Anonymous

    The education system is in a mess. We should have got it right the first time instead of spending millions on ' remedial classes '. I am pessimistic as to whether the remedial classes are of any good. Important attitudes like self-discipline, strive for excellence, hard work, and basic skills/knowledge , should heve been inculcated at a much younger age. After going through a mediocre education system it it a bit too late. And its also a lot more expensive.

    It is estimated that there are nearly 1.4 million civil servants and to guarantee employment for thousands more of these unemployed graduates is financial profligacy.

    The country is simply living beyond its means . Even now we are faced with a huge budget deficit.What more in 4 to 5 years, when we become a net importer of oil .

    Our future generations will pay the price of a lower ringgit, lower standard of living , high employment , mass exodus of skilled workers and maybe even unskilled ones ( labourers, maids ). And by this time, Thailand, Vietnam and even Indonesia would have overtaken us.

  • John  - NEP policies is the cause

    All these problems are caused by NEP policies. NEP breeds mediocrity and mediocre graduates couldn't find work. Now they are spending more money to retrain the mediocres and even giving them money to do business. It's like throwing money into the sea.

  • rama  - another financial scandal

    doc has confirmed what many of us suspect. the public coffers are open wide for the taking if you know who and also have some know how. us poor taxpayers are being screwed right, left and center

  • K S Ong  - Pie in the sky, figures in the air

    How many of us can honestly say we understand what the figures quoted by a minister for any purpose are about, or where the money is coming from, and how it is going to be spent?

    In other words, a minister can simply quote a figure, invariably disputed by some oppositionists or fair-minded persons (ignored by the said minister or at best, re-confirmed to be correct; btw, did you get the methodology promised by Najib on calculating NEP %?), and there is no follow up or follow through to see any semblance of accountability.

    Recently, a minister admitted that an assumed corruption which increased the costs of expenditure by 20% would amount to Rm28 billion! This is presumably a conservative figure, coming from BN, and our minds boggle at the actual wastages and leakages. Yet, our efficient government (other countries wanted to learn from us) cannot do anything about this huge problem.

    DPM said he was worried if Pakatan were to take over in 2-3 years time, they would not be able to manage the economy or administration of the country. Even assuming a worst case scenario of no good leaders, just good accountability would have saved the billions mentioned. Pakatan cannot do any worse than BN.

  • Edwin SJ NG, PJK.  - A Stupid Malaysian.

    I am looking for an honest graduate or Diploma Holder or even an SPM Holder to work in a retail outlet.

    It is a very interesting job but rather long hours.

    The pay is decent and training will be provided. The location is Juru Penang and you must be chinese. Send me an email if you are interested. I wish to save at least one graduate.

  • Lucas Lee  - hopeless grads...

    I really couldn't agree more to all above statements and facts. My wife runs a children enrichment programme and we hire many part-timers to help to deal with the children. However, I must say, majority of the part-timers who are either undergrads or graduates, really disappoint us. They are unreliable, not puntual, AWOL, hardly understand English, giving tons of excuses not to come to work and after getting salary, no show !! Is this the future generation that our country can rely on ?

  • Non-Graduan  - Congratulations ! You are a Degree Holder

    Our govt only knows how to "upgrade" those college to university level by changing the names so that everybody will be a "GRADUAN" Quality wise, I think you know better than me !
    If govt do not employ them, who else ?

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