As the global community marks World Youth Skills Day on July 15 this year, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has issued a stark reminder that unlocking the full potential of younger generations depends on large-scale investment in inclusive, high-quality education and skills training. Closing the growing global skills gap, Guterres emphasizes, is the key to generating widespread decent employment opportunities and building sustainable livelihoods for billions of young people around the world.
Established by the UN General Assembly in 2014, World Youth Skills Day was created to draw global attention to the critical strategic role of equipping young people with the competencies they need for gainful employment, dignified work, and entrepreneurial success. This year’s observance centers on the theme “Skills for a Shared Future,” with a core focus on empowering youth with the full range of technical, artificial intelligence, digital, green, and social-emotional skills required to succeed in a fast-evolving global labor market and drive inclusive sustainable development. The annual event also spotlights young people’s unique role as agents of change in building more inclusive and resilient societies worldwide.
The UN stresses that the global world of work is undergoing unprecedented transformation, driven by three major forces: the rise of artificial intelligence, the urgent global transition to green economies, and growing social complexity. These shifts are fundamentally reshaping how people learn, work, and engage with their communities. To navigate this changing landscape successfully, young people need far more than narrow technical training: they require a balanced mix of competencies that combines technical, digital, AI, green, social-emotional, and civic skills with irreplaceable human qualities that no technology can replicate.
Even as global youth unemployment has seen a modest decline in recent years, youth joblessness and exclusion remain one of the world’s most pressing economic and social challenges. Data from the International Labour Organization’s (ILO) 2024 Global Employment Trends for Youth report shows that the global youth unemployment rate dropped to 13% in 2023 — a 15-year low that sits below the pre-pandemic 2019 rate of 13.8%. But this recovery has been deeply uneven across regions: youth unemployment rates in the Arab States, East Asia, and South-East Asia remained higher in 2023 than they were before the COVID-19 pandemic.
Worse, one in five young people globally — and more than one quarter of all young women — fall into the NEET category, meaning they are not engaged in employment, education, or skills training of any kind. The global NEET rate for young women stands at 28.1%, more than double the 13.1% rate recorded for young men. Local data from Jamaica’s Statistical Institute, for example, puts the country’s youth unemployment rate at 11.7% as of April 2026, with young women carrying a disproportionately heavy share of that burden. Even for young people who do find work, decent, formal employment remains out of reach for most: more than half of all young workers are stuck in informal employment, and in low-income countries, three out of four young workers only hold self-employment or temporary positions with little to no job security or benefits.
While targeted investment in green and blue economic sectors has the potential to create 8.4 million new jobs for young people by 2030, the UN emphasizes that these new roles must guarantee core labor standards, including equal pay, collective bargaining rights, and protection from workplace harassment.
At the center of global efforts to close the youth skills gap is Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET), a sector that has long been unfairly stigmatized in many education systems around the world. A common but myopic narrative has framed TVET as a track only for less academically inclined students, but global education leaders say this outdated perspective must be completely reworked to meet 21st-century labor demands. As part of the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, SDG 4 — which calls for inclusive and equitable quality education and lifelong learning for all — prioritizes expanding access to affordable, high-quality TVET, helping all people acquire the vocational skills needed for employment, closing gender skill gaps, and ensuring vulnerable groups can access training opportunities.
Far from being a second-choice education track, TVET is uniquely positioned to address the overlapping economic, social, and environmental challenges facing the world today. It equips young people with the practical skills needed to enter the workforce, including skills for self-employment and entrepreneurship. It also makes education systems more responsive to shifting skill demands from employers and communities, boosts overall productivity, and increases wage levels for workers. By expanding work-based learning opportunities and ensuring skills gained are officially recognized and certified, TVET also reduces barriers to employment for marginalized groups, including low-skilled underemployed and unemployed workers, out-of-school youth, and NEETs.
In the Caribbean region, the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) uses annual World Youth Skills Day observances to highlight the urgent need to equip Caribbean youth with 21st-century skills to drive employment and regional sustainable development. CARICOM partners with regional entities such as Jamaica’s HEART/NSTA Trust to expand and improve TVET programs across the region, with the goal of building a resilient, future-ready workforce. The annual day serves as a strategic platform to advance key regional priorities, including reducing regional import dependency through strengthening agricultural sectors, closing the digital divide, and supporting youth entrepreneurship across all member states. Even with these efforts, however, systemic barriers remain: global education systems are still marked by deep inequities that leave many young people — especially those living in rural and low-income communities — disadvantaged and excluded from quality training opportunities. This exclusion has contributed to widespread hopelessness among many young people globally.
Disturbing UN data underscores the scale of the crisis: 86% of current students report they do not feel prepared to succeed in an AI-driven workplace. Some 450 million young people — 70% of the global youth population — are economically disengaged, due entirely to a lack of the skills demanded by the modern labor market. In many low- and middle-income countries, fewer than 1% of poor rural women complete secondary education, locking them into cycles of exclusion and poverty.
Skills are far more than just a pathway to individual employment: they are transformative tools that can empower entire generations and build collective long-term wealth. Global leaders and education advocates are calling for a coordinated global movement to rekindle hope among marginalized young people. On this World Youth Skills Day, organizers stress that young people can only become a powerful positive force for global development when they have access to the knowledge and opportunities they need to thrive. In particular, young people need the targeted education and skill training required to contribute to productive, sustainable economies — and they need inclusive labor markets that can absorb them into meaningful work.
This commentary was written by Wayne Campbell, an educator and social commentator focused on how development policies intersect with culture and gender equity.
