Namibia’s Unemployment Crisis: As Namibians, We Cannot Solve a Structural Problem with Emotional Solutions
A Practical Path to Reduce Unemployment in a Country Where 36.9% of People Are Without Work
Namibia’s unemployment rate is not a statistic, in my opinion, it’s a national emergency.
- 36.9% overall unemployment (2023)
- 54.8% if we include discouraged job seekers
- Youth unemployment above 60% in some age brackets
This is not a temporary issue. It is structural.
And structural problems cannot be solved with emotional solutions.
We can’t workshop our way out of this.
We can’t campaign our way out of this.
We can’t blame our way out of this.
We need to engineer our way out of this.
Why Namibia’s Unemployment Is So PersistentYour Attractive Heading
There are 4 core structural failures in our economy
- Weak Industrial Capacity
We export resources and import the value. - Skills Mismatch
Our education system doesn’t match our economic requirements. - Capital Flight / Externalization
Large amounts of Namibian money are invested offshore instead of building domestic capacity. - Slow & Administrative Government Systems
Investors wait years for permits, licenses, or clarity.
This combination creates a country where jobs are difficult to create, and employers are afraid to expand.
What Starbucks Taught Me About Simple Solutions
Howard Schultz, the former CEO of Starbucks once argued something that stuck with me:
“There is over $2.5 trillion held overseas by US companies. If the US government lowered the tax for repatriation, only if linked to hiring new employees, unemployment could drop dramatically.”
In simple terms:
Bring Money Home → Pay Less Tax → Only If You Hire.
A direct exchange:
Jobs for Tax Incentive.
And he asked the most important question:
Why can’t we do that?
His answer:
Politics, Partisanship, Ego, and Ideology.
It sounds familiar, doesn’t it?
Can This Work in Namibia?
We do not have $2.5 trillion offshore.
But we do have:
- ~N$15 billion in Namibian outward FDI
- Hundreds of billions of Namibian dollars invested offshore by pension funds and institutions over 15 years
- A portion of corporate profits held abroad to avoid tax inefficiencies
This capital is not “sitting idle”, but some of it could come home under the right conditions.
So here is a workable Namibian version of the Starbucks concept:
Policy Proposal: The Namibia Employment Repatriation Window
A Once-Off, Targeted Tax Incentive:
Companies can repatriate foreign capital at a lower tax rate
ONLY IF:
- The capital is used for:
- Local manufacturing or industrial expansion
- Renewable energy projects
- Ship repair, offshore support yard expansion
- Agri-processing plants
- Logistics corridors (port → rail → SADC)
2. AND they provide:
- Proof of New Permanent Namibian Jobs
- Proof of Training Programs
- Proof of Local Procurement
3. AND government verifies compliance through:
- A digital reporting platform
- Yearly audits
- Penalties for abuse (no share buybacks or dividend payments)
This is not “Tax Cuts for the rich.”
It is capital exchange for employment.
Incentive = Outcome.
Performance = Reward.
Like engineering: You don’t get the output without the input.
What The Government Can Do (Realistically)
- Fast-Track Industrial Projects
Reduce 24-month approval timelines to 120 days - Establish Sector-Based Job Creation Compacts
- Maritime & Ship Repair (Walvis Bay, Lüderitz)
- Green Hydrogen Corridor
- Transport & Logistics Superhub
- Uranium → Nuclear Research Partnerships
- Fishing → Processing & Value-Add Onshore
3. National Skills Pipeline
A skills system linked directly to upcoming sectors:
- Welders / Fitters / Electricians / Marine Engineers
- Hydrogen Technicians
- Uranium Processing Techs
- Port Operations & Logistics Controllers
What the Private Sector Must Commit To
- Stop Gatekeeping Jobs behind degrees where skill is enough
Competency frameworks > Certificates - Apprenticeships as a Hiring Strategy, Not CSR
Every factory, mine, port, plant, and shipyard must train. - Stop Exporting All Value
Invest in Namibia first, diversify later.
Private sectors cannot demand pro-business policy
while refusing to become pro-Namibia.
What the Public Must Also Accept
This is the hardest part to say, but I’ll say it:
A job is not created because you want one.
A job is created because value can be generated.
This means:
- Not every job will be in an air-conditioned office
- Not every job will be a management job
- Not every job will match your degree
We need to restore dignity to practical work:
- Welding is noble
- Carpentry is noble
- Fishing is noble
- Farming is noble
- Repair is noble
- Maintenance is noble
And every job that feeds a family is noble.
10 Practical Measures to Immediately Reduce Unemployment
| Measure | Impact |
| Industrial tax incentives tied to hiring | Job creation & skills transfer |
| Digital national permit system | Faster investment cycle |
| Free training for unemployed youth (vocational) | Skill-to-job pipeline |
| A Namibian Sovereign Employment Fund | Co-finance youth job placements |
| Green Hydrogen & Maritime Training Academies | Prepare for future economy |
| Duty reductions on manufacturing machinery | Boost industrialisation |
| Incentives for companies hiring apprentices | Reduce “no experience” trap |
| Diaspora Skills Program | Bring expertise home temporarily |
| Ban degree inflation for non-degree jobs | Unlock practical hiring |
| Repair & Maintenance Industry Grants | Shipyard, port, mining → instant jobs |
A Hard Truth in Closing
Namibia does not have a job shortage. It has a capacity shortage.
We have:
- Land
- Minerals
- Ports
- Ocean
- Energy potential
- Human capital
We are not poor.
We are underdeveloped in the places that produce opportunity.
Namibia will not reduce unemployment through hope alone.
Not through slogans.
Not through elections.
Not through blame.
Not through anger.
But through capability.
Through science.
Through skills.
Through industrial design.
Through policy that rewards performance.
This is not optimism.
This is engineering.
And engineering works when you build.
Unemployment is not a political failure.
It is a national systems failure.
We fix systems — and the jobs will come.
Please note:
This is not a definitive account.
It’s the beginning of a conversation I hope you will join.
