Nigeria’s Education Shift: Why Female Graduates Are Topping NYSC Mobilisation Charts
For the first time in the 53-year history of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), female graduates are consistently outnumbering their male counterparts, a trend that experts say will permanently alter the face of Nigerian leadership.
For the first time in the 53-year history of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), female graduates are consistently outnumbering their male counterparts, a trend that experts say will permanently alter the face of Nigerian leadership.
Speaking on News Night, the director-general of the NYSC, Brigadier General Y.D. Ahmed, revealed that the “reversal in trend” is no longer a fluke but a sustained reality since 2020.
“Since 2020 till date, consistently, the female gender has topped our mobilisation chart… We are producing more female graduates in Nigeria today than males,” the NYSC boss said on the Channels Television Monday night show.
While the NYSC was founded in 1973 to heal a post-war nation through the “Triple R” programme (Reconstruction, Rehabilitation, and Reintegration), the DG noted that the scheme is now undergoing a digital and demographic metamorphosis.
The “Millennial” era has officially ended at the NYSC. The scheme is now transitioning to a 100% Gen Z population, forcing a total overhaul of how the government communicates with its youth.
“By the end of this year, we will have totally stopped mobilising the millennial generation… we will be 100% Gen Z,” the DG stated. “We are on social media—TikTok, everything—because that’s the space within which the corps members that we interact with live.”
With more women entering the corporate pipeline, the DG issued a direct challenge to the Nigerian private sector and government agencies.
The focus must shift from simply “hiring” to “sustaining” this new majority.
“What that tells us is that in years to come, we are going to have more females in places of authority or in government… than males,” the DG said.
“Whatever challenges there are associated with having the female gender in the workplace, we have to start working towards that. How do you manage the issue of maternity leave… and all those things that are not there with the male gender? Those are some of the things we should be thinking [about].”
To support this growing population, the DG highlighted the NYSC Trust Fund Bill, currently awaiting presidential assent. This bill is viewed as the “silver bullet” for providing startup grants to these young entrepreneurs.
“The major challenge I face here is the issue of camp orientation… the Trust Fund bill now will require setting aside 0.2%… of the agreeable revenue as a trust fund,” he explained.
This would allow the NYSC to move beyond the traditional “monthly allowee” and provide 0% interest grants for skills-based startups.
As the NYSC prepares for its 53rd anniversary on May 22nd, it stands as more than a rite of passage; it is now the primary data point proving that the future of Nigerian industry and governance is undeniably female.
