GIZ Partners TDI Global Limited For Job Creation

Ghana is faced with 12% unemployment and more than 50% underemployment among the youth, both higher than overall unemployment and underemployment rates in Sub-Saharan Africa, according to the World Bank report of September 2020.

The Ghanaian-German Centre (GGC), which is implemented by the Deutsche GesellschaftfürInternationaleZusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH on behalf of the German Government, is partnering with the Ministry of Employment and Labour relations to provide job opportunities through the pilot “Graduate Work and Salary Top-Up Programme”.

This programme serves a dual objective. Firstly, it aims to cushion reputable Small and Medium Enterprises’ (SMEs) post-COVID recovery by supporting their wage bill as they seek to recruit fresh hands to spur growth from the effects of the COVID pandemic.

On a threshold of 1,500cedis, the GGC pays 60% of employee’s salary for 6months and 40% for the subsequent 4months. The programme therefore supports SMEs by leveraging their wage bill for growth, whilst promoting employment, improving skills, and entrepreneurship among the youth, through their 10months corporate experience that serves as a springboard from retention or alternate employment opportunities.

The newly hired staff, who must be given a contract that includes their training plan, acquire valuable on-the-job learning to augment their work experience, sharpen their skills, develop their career goals, and establish corporate networks that may prove valuable throughout their careers. The motivated individuals with rounded skills bring fresh thinking and innovation to their workplaces, as the organizations benefit from the savings off their wage bill and create more jobs.

The initiative therefore contributes towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goal No. 8 by promoting inclusive and sustainable economic growth, productive employment, and decent work for the youth.

The GGC is partnering with TDI Global Limited to bring its internationally top-rated approach to building capacity of workforce and enterprises in a structured manner. Through the TDI’sMy3D Programme (Discover, Develop and Deploy), beneficiaries are taken through a well-structured self-discovery and self-mastery programme that enable them to understand their skills strengths and gaps. They are then provided career guidance, counseling, mentorship, and training that develop and optimize their skills before and during their period of internship.

TDI collaborates with the employers to determine their specific skills need and then equips the youth (My3D Scholars) with the right work skills, digital skills, leadership, and entrepreneurship skills that enable them to bring fresh thinking and innovation to the organizations, improve productivity and growth and enable the organizations to become internationally competitive.

About the Ghanaian-German Centre (GGC)

The Global Programme “Migration for Development” is commissioned by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) and is implemented by the Deutsche GesellschaftfürInternationaleZusammenarbeit GmbH (GIZ).

The objective of programme is to create and provide advice on prospects for returning migrants in Ghana as well as for potential migrants and to address irregular migration by providing information on legal ways of labour migration. In Ghana, the Programme has established a structure for migration and reintegration advice, through the Ghanaian-German Centre (GGC) which became operational in December 2017.

GGC is set up in collaboration with the Ministry for Employment and Labour Relations (MELR) of Ghana. It aims to provide counselling services to the local populace, returning and potential migrants. The focus lies on reintegration support for returning Ghanaian migrants, as well providing the youth employment and educational perspectives in Ghana. Further, the Centre provides information on legal migration to Germany.

The project has since inception trained over 27,700 individuals in Entrepreneurship and Employability Skills, 3,700 have found jobs; with majority (92%) being self-employment, 4,299 have received business start-up support, with about 1300 receiving technical/vocational short-term skills training.