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Ethiopia and South Africa Study Tour on Labour Market Information Systems

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Summary

From 14–17 April 2026, an Ethiopian delegation from the Ministry of Labor and Skills and Ethiopia Statistics Service, supported by the ILO BRMM Programme, visited South Africa for a four-day study tour on Labour Market Information Systems. The delegation engaged with South Africa's Department of Employment and Labour, Statistics South Africa, and the Department of Higher Education and Training to observe public employment services, labour force survey methods, and skills classification systems. Both countries face high youth unemployment, informality, and fragmented data, making the exchange directly relevant. Ethiopian experts identified three priority areas: improving system interoperability, strengthening job-matching services, and aligning skills development with labour market demand.

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The document reports on a peer-learning study tour where an Ethiopian government delegation travelled to South Africa to observe how the country has built and sustained its labour market information ecosystem. The four-day programme included site visits to employment centres, data-production briefings from Statistics South Africa, and skills-system sessions with South Africa's Department of Higher Education and Training and Quality Council for Trades and Occupations.

Government labour ministries and statistical agencies engaged in labour market information system development may find South Africa's model of sustained institutional coordination and data integration a reference point for their own initiatives. The Ethiopian delegation's identified priorities—system interoperability, job-matching services, and skills-labour demand alignment—represent concrete areas where peer-exchange outcomes have been documented.

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Apr 23, 2026

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South South Cooperation

Ethiopia and South Africa share lessons on Labour Market Information Systems

An Ethiopian delegation visited South Africa to strengthen its Labour Market Information System through peer learning, gaining practical insights on data systems, employment services, and skills alignment to improve coordination and evidence-based planning.

22 April 2026

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  • Linkedin Ethiopian delegation study tour session at South Africa Labour Centre © ILO Pretoria, South Africa (ILO News) -  From 14 – 17 April 2026, the Ethiopian delegation from the Ministry of Labor and Skills (MoLS) and Ethiopia Statistics Service (ESS), supported by the ILO BRMM Programme visited Johannesburg, South Africa for a study visit on Labour Market Information Systems to learn how a comparable country has built and sustained a functional labour market information system.

Ethiopia is advancing its Labour Market Information System (E-LMIS), a digital platform designed to connect jobseekers, employers, training institutions, and policymakers.  The system has made ground, but some challenges remain, such as fragmented data across institutions, limited interoperability, and the need for stronger coordination. Moving forward on these requires more than technology alone, as it takes practical experience, collaboration, and learning from those who have faced similar realities.

South Africa’s labour market information ecosystem, built through sustained institutional coordination and integration of data systems, offered relevant and context-driven lessons.  Both countries deal with high youth unemployment, informality, and fragmented data, which made the exchange direct and practical rather than theoretical.

Over four days, the Ethiopian delegation engaged directly with key South African institutions. At the Department of Employment and Labour, participants gained a close look at public employment services, including a tour of an Employment Centre, where they observed how jobseekers are registered, matched with vacancies, and supported through career guidance services.  Seeing the system in operation was a core part of the learning.

© ILO © ILO

Delegation visit Germiston labour centre in South Africa

On the second day, engagement with Statistics South Africa (StatsSA) provided a deeper understanding of labour market data production. Discussions focused on labour force surveys, data quality assurance, and how statistical outputs inform national planning and policy decisions.  The discussions also surfaced the practical challenges of keeping data reliable and up to date across multiple institutions.

© ILO © ILO

Delegation visit Statistics South Africa

The final day focused on skills systems and their link to labour market intelligence, through meetings with the Department of Higher Education and Training and the Quality Council for Trades and Occupations (QCTO). These sessions explored how occupational classification systems, qualifications frameworks, and skills anticipation mechanisms are aligned with labour market needs, offering concrete reference points for Ethiopia’s efforts to better connect training with employment outcomes. Through this engagement, Ethiopian experts identified specific areas to work on, including improving system interoperability, strengthening job-matching services, as well as aligning skills development with labour demand.

The visit also opened the door to continued exchange, with both sides expressing interest in follow-up technical engagement as Ethiopia is heading towards the next phase of E-LMIS implementation.


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Last updated

Classification

Agency
ILO
Published
April 22nd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
International
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Educational institutions
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Labour market information systems Public employment services Skills classification
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Employment & Labor
Operational domain
Regulatory Affairs
Topics
Government Contracting Data Privacy

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