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Urgent action needed to retain hope

Human Health Perspective On One Health And Zoonotic Outbreaks
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IN recent years, Pakistan has experienced a brain drain due to a challenging employment landscape and limited awareness of global labor market trends. The exit of skilled and educated youth in search of better prospects abroad is not just symptomatic of the nation’s economic malaise but also an ac-tive agent of further decline. The statistics are depressing. In 2023, more than 800,000 Pakistanis sought better employment opportunities outside the country, representing a staggering increase compared to previous years. By the middle of 2024, this figure had risen to over 500,000; thus, the phenomenon is continuing and escalating significantly. These statistics are clear indicators that it is not just a failing state but a failure being inflicted on youth who seek opportunities to thrive.

Another important issue is the ongoing trend of youth unemployment and skills mismatch. Accord-ing to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, the youth unemployment rate in Pakistan is a startling 12.7% in 2023. In a recent survey, Gallup Pakistan found that 63% of the youth had a negative perception of their future in Pakistan, where limited job prospects and an uncertain economic situation may persuade them to seek opportunities elsewhere. This perception is not unfounded; industries that could support substantial employment are closing, exacerbating the issue. The economic impact from the closure of these industries has been crippling. Major textile and manufacturing sectors have significantly contracted due to increasing challenges in doing business, rising costs, and energy shortages. This has resulted in a loss of thousands of jobs, forcing many, especially youth, into an exodus. The closure of these industries translates not only into job losses but also a loss of skills, in-novation, and potential. With the demise of such industries, workers who would have contributed to their expansion find themselves displaced in the labor market or resorting to alternative employ-ment elsewhere, mostly outside Pakistan.

The Road Ahead: A Bleak Future?

The continuous outflow of young, skilled professionals will weaken the country’s human capital, hampering innovation, productivity, and economic growth. This vicious cycle of unemployment and brain drain will worsen, leaving Pakistan with an aging workforce and a shrinking pool of talent to drive the economy. The government must act urgently, almost as if in wartime, to create employ-ment, align the supply and demand of the labor market with both national and global needs, and improve the business environment to prevent industrial shutdowns. If this issue is left unaddressed, it will exacerbate the brain drain and plunge Pakistan further into a crisis of human and social capi-tal, with economic stagnation as a peripheral consequence. The brain drain crisis is not only a symp-tom of Pakistan’s current economic challenges but also a ticking time bomb that, if ignored, will have far-reaching and long-lasting effects on the nation’s future.

—The writer is contributing columnist, based in Faisalbad .

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