UBOS Reports Tertiary Enrollment at More Than 480,000 as 1,400 Institutions Turn out Over 241,000 Graduates

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By Ben Musanje Uganda’s pipeline of skilled human capital is expanding steadily, with new data showing a system dominated by private providers, rising female participation, and a growing flow of graduates into the labor market.The National Human Resource Survey 2023–2024 places the total number of tertiary institutions at 1,453, of which 1,010 are privately owned, leaving the remainder under government. This imbalance is reflected not only in ownership but also in the scale of training, where private institutions account for more than twice the enrollment recorded in public establishments.Across the system, the structure of institutions reveals a contrast between size and output. Vocational and technical colleges are the most numerous, followed by colleges of commerce and business studies. However, universities and their affiliated degree-awarding institutions carry the heaviest load in terms of actual student numbers, positioning them as the primary source of future professionals entering Uganda’s labor market.Enrollment has been rising consistently over the three-year period from 2021 to 2023, increasing from 364,617 to 484,746. This upward trend signals a growing demand for higher education and training, but it also underscores the pressure on the economy to generate sufficient employment opportunities for graduates in the coming years.While presenting the findings at statistics house in Kampala on Thursday, UBOS statistician Dunstan Aguta explained that enrollment figures are critical in forecasting labor supply, as they indicate how many individuals will soon be entering the job market.Gender dynamics within enrollment point to a gradual shift shaped by affirmative action policies. Female learners slightly outnumber their male counterparts across the years, a pattern that is even more pronounced within universities. The trend suggests a narrowing gender gap in access to higher education and a potential rebalancing of the workforce in the long term.The distribution of students by type of institution further highlights the dominance of universities and affiliated colleges in absorbing the largest share of learners, followed by vocational and technical institutions. Together, these two categories form the backbone of Uganda’s human resource development system, producing the bulk of skilled labor.Graduation figures mirror the expansion seen in enrollment. The number of graduates rose from 182,065 to 241,293 over the same period, reinforcing the steady increase in labor supply. Private institutions again account for the larger share of graduates, reflecting their dominance in enrollment.As noted in the presentation, the gender pattern seen in enrollment carries through to completion, with female graduates slightly exceeding male graduates, particularly in universities and vocational institutions that produce most of the workforce entrants.These patterns carry significant implications for planning. Rising enrollment and graduation numbers provide a clearer picture of how many individuals are likely to join the workforce in the near future, enabling policymakers to anticipate demand for jobs and align training with labor market needs.At the same time, the data points to the central role of private institutions in sustaining Uganda’s education system. With more than two-thirds of institutions under private ownership and higher enrollment levels, the private sector has become a critical partner in human capital development.The expansion of tertiary education, coupled with increasing female participation and growing graduation numbers, signals progress in building a more inclusive and skilled workforce. Yet it also raises questions about absorption capacity, as the economy must keep pace with the rising number of graduates seeking employment.