THE IMPLEMENTATION RESULTS PARADOX: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF YOUTH EMPOWERMENT SCHEMES AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN NIGERIA
Keywords:
Youth Empowerment, National Development, Stipend-Dependency, Human Capital, Digital Infrastructure, Skill-Infrastructure MarketAbstract
The quest for national development in Nigeria is inextricably linked to the empowerment of its youth population, yet a persistent gap remains between policy intervention and socio-economic outcomes. This study investigates the Implementation-Results Paradox, examining why high-profile initiatives such as N-Power and YOUWIN have failed to significantly reduce youth unemployment, which remained above 40% in 2022. Utilizing a qualitative meta-synthesis and thematic content analysis of secondary data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), World Bank, and UNDP, the research evaluates the efficacy of current empowerment strategies through the lenses of Human Capital, Empowerment, and Modernization Theories. Findings reveal that Nigerian youth empowerment initiatives are largely consumptive, characterized by a stipend-dependency trap that lacks structured industrial exit strategies or permanent employment transitions. The study further identifies structural bottlenecks, including a critical mismatch between theoretical education and digital market demands, and a "hard ceiling" created by inadequate power and internet infrastructure. The paper concludes that without shifting from short-term poverty alleviation to a Skill-Infrastructure-Market (SIM) framework, Nigeria’s demographic dividend remains a risk to national security and stability. It recommends the codification of youth policies to ensure continuity and the strategic leverage of digital technologies to foster sustainable industrial integration.
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