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Beyond the Degree: 99 High-Demand Careers Matriculants Can Start Now
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Published
5 months agoon
The final bell has rung, the matric results are in, and for thousands of young South Africans, the pressing question isn’t just “what next?”it’s “where is the work?” In a landscape often dominated by the university-or-bust narrative, a critical reality is being overlooked: the economy is desperately calling for skilled hands.
According to the Kagiso Trust, there are 99 specific occupations, all in high demand, that new matriculants can qualify for with focused, often short-term, technical and vocational training. “The striking reality is that the economy is crying out for skilled workers across numerous sectors,” says Kagiso Trust CEO Mankodi Moitse.
This isn’t theoretical. The 2025 Xpatweb Critical Skills Survey found that 89% of businesses report that critical skills vacancies are actively harming their operations, causing lost productivity and project delays. An ageing workforce, emigration, and a lack of experienced new artisans are creating a 20-year skills gap. South Africa isn’t just short of jobs; it’s short of qualified people to fill them.
These 99 careers, requiring National Qualifications Framework (NQF) levels 1–5 (often achievable in a year), are the backbone of a functioning economy. They are not dead ends, but proven launchpads.
Building & Construction: Bricklayers, Carpenters, Plumbers. As the country strives to build and repair infrastructure, these trades are indispensable.
Engineering & Manufacturing: Welders, Boilermakers, Millwrights, Mechatronics Technicians. These are the roles that keep factories running and industry alive.
Electrical & Electronic: Electricians, Solar Installers, Telecommunications Technicians. Critical for keeping the lights on and powering the green transition.
Automotive & Transport: Mechanics, Vehicle Body Builders. Essential to keep the country’s vehicles and logistics moving.
Business & Administration: Bookkeepers, Office Administrators, Project Administrators. The operational spine of every successful company.
Hospitality & Tourism: Chefs, Tour Guides. Key drivers of a major economic sector.
Healthcare & Community Services: Community Health Workers, Carers. The heart of community well-being.
Security & Safety: Security Officers, Traffic Officers.
Technical & Specialised: GIS Technicians, Interior Designers.
“This isn’t just about getting a job; it’s about starting a career with genuine growth potential,” emphasises Moitse. An electrician can become a master artisan and start their own contracting business. A chef can rise to head a kitchen and eventually own a restaurant. A bookkeeper can advance to financial manager.
These pathways offer something profound: dignity, tangible skill, and economic agency. They represent a future built not on waiting for opportunity, but on creating it with competence. For the matriculant wondering which way to turn, the message is clear: look to the skills the country needs. Your future might not be in a lecture hall, but in a workshop, on a construction site, or in a thriving kitchenand it’s a future that’s waiting to be built.
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