Report says Nepal must create jobs to face rising population
Nepal's working-age population is projected to grow significantly by 2050, presenting a rare opportunity to accelerate economic growth. But the challenge is enormous: the country must create 6.5 million jobs over the next three decades to absorb the influx of young workers, according to a recent World Bank report.
Titled "Nurturing Nepali Talent to Foster Economic Growth", the report warns that achieving this will be difficult if job creation continues at the same slow pace seen over the past decade. It points to lessons from East Asian nations that have successfully transformed demographic growth into a labor dividend.
Nepal's share of human capital in national wealth remains below the average for countries with similar income levels. Although the World Bank upgraded Nepal from a low-income to a lower-middle-income country in 2019, and the government's 15th five-year plan aims for upper-middle-income status by 2030, the country still lags behind its peers.
What is particularly concerning is the decline in human capital over the past few decades.
In the early 1990s, Nepal was comparable to other lower-middle-income countries, but by 2018, the gap had widened significantly. While other countries increased human capital steadily, Nepal's share has decreased, making sustained economic growth more challenging.
The report highlights Nepal's heavy reliance on informal employment, which has profound economic consequences.
Informal workers in South Asia earn 61 to 65 percent less than their formal-sector counterparts, limiting individual income, perpetuating poverty, and slowing overall growth. Informal work also reduces productivity, tax revenue, and exacerbates income inequality, posing long-term challenges for Nepal's development.
Limited domestic job opportunities drive many young Nepalis to work abroad.
Migration has surged from around 750,000 in 1990 to 2.6 million by 2020, roughly 8 percent of the population and one of the highest rates in South Asia after Afghanistan.
Remittances from these workers are equivalent to nearly a quarter of Nepal's GDP and have been the single biggest driver of poverty reduction over the past decade, funding education, healthcare, and housing.
Yet this comes at a cost.
A significant portion of Nepal's labor — skilled and unskilled — is contributing to other countries' economies rather than its own.
Many migrant workers face uncertainties abroad, from cultural differences to challenging work environments, and reintegration into Nepal's labor market remains difficult.
Without proper support programs, returning workers struggle to find jobs that match their experience, limiting Nepal's ability to benefit from their acquired skills.
Domestic job creation is further constrained by limited access to capital, which restricts business expansion and the ability to generate employment.
Most existing jobs are low-paying and concentrated in the informal sector. Between 2010 and 2018, only four in 10 new working-age individuals found employment, and today, 82 percent of Nepal's workforce remains informal, far above regional and global averages.
Vulnerable groups
Women face even greater disadvantages.
Two-thirds of Nepali women are engaged in unpaid household work, and limited childcare services and inadequate maternity policies force many to stay home.
Consequently, fewer than one in three working-age women hold paid jobs. This rate is well below the average for lower-middle-income countries. Women with limited education rarely access formal jobs, and on average, Nepali girls utilize only 12 percent of their human capital potential compared to 26 percent for boys.
Nepal's low Utilization-Adjusted Human Capital Index reflects these challenges, with labor force participation averaging 39 percent and even lower for youth (28 percent) and women (26 percent).
Over 12 million working-age people are inactive, restricting national productivity.
THE KATHMANDU POST, NEPAL




























