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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Young Iraqis get innovative to make a living

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From a roving cafe to scrap metal sculptures, young Iraqis unable to tap into the country’s oil wealth are having to find creative ways to make a living.


While their parents generally went straight into public sector jobs after graduation, the job market for Iraqi youths has become starkly different in the post-Saddam Hussein era.


In the decade which followed the US invasion and the dictator’s ouster in 2003, authorities continued to increase state hirings.


But now, as 26-year-old Karrar Alaa discovered, there are no more guarantees.


Three years ago, he was counting on his business degree leading to a public sector job in the southern port city of Basra.


But tired of waiting, he has turned entrepreneur.


After gathering up all of his savings and borrowing money from relatives, Alaa invested in a car and transformed it into a coffee shop on wheels.


An initial investment of $20,000 has led to daily earnings of around 150,000 dinars, or $120, from cups of coffee made in a machine installed in the car boot.


Mashreq Jabbar earns similar sums from his little bookshop squeezed into a corridor of a Basra fashion mall.


“Renting a shop costs $6,000 a month; I only pay $2,500 for my hallway,” said the slim 26-year-old, as he tidied shelves of school books, romantic novels and poetry collections.


The geology graduate also hoped his degree would make him employable in the local oil industry.


Even though the sector accounts for 89 per cent of the state budget, it provides only one per cent of jobs.


It is not uncommon to find to find engineers working as taxi drivers, or sandwich stalls manned by literature graduates in a country of avid readers.


Officially, 10.8 per cent of Iraqis are jobless, while youth unemployment is twice as high in a country where 60 per cent of the population are aged under 24.


A mushrooming number of private universities — with Baghdad boasting around 30 — has made the situation even worse among graduates.


The private sector which emerged after Saddam’s rule has failed to fill the employment gap, with many young Iraqis holding out for the coveted public sector posts.


“The common view is that there’s no choice but to work in the public sector,” said Ahmed Abdel Hassan, an economics professor at the University of Basra.


“Young people who go to work in the private sector say it’s a temporary move before getting a post in the public sector,” he said.


Even Basra’s entrepreneurs see the benefits, with Alaa noting the social security and pension perks, while Jabbar pointed to civil servants’ guaranteed salaries.


Many of those holding out for a state job, however, are left unable to move out of their parents’ house.


Omar Abdallah, 28, had pinned his hopes on getting a teaching job at the end of his studies in fine art.


Iraq once had a high-quality and free education system, but that was left in tatters following the international embargo of the 1990s after Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait.


Having failed to land a job and with no capital to start a business of his own, Abdallah began collecting scrap metal.


“I could only count on myself and my talent,” he said at his family home, where one room serves as both his workshop and exhibition space.


Abdallah has transformed old bicycle chains into scorpions, cutlery into dragonflies and used nuts and bolts to make motorbike models.


In a good month he can sell half a dozen sculptures, charging between $200 and $250 apiece.


“People love my sculptures,” he said proudly. “They tell me: ‘How did you manage to make something so beautiful out of rubbish?’” — AFP


Karim Jameel


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