
Strategic Objectives
The National Employment Plan (NEP) for Cameroon is conceived to reduce unemployment in Cameroon by creating sustainable, inclusive, and trade-driven employment opportunities through public-private partnerships, entrepreneurship, and regional value chain development.
-
Trade-Driven Job Creation Framework
A. Sectoral Focus for Employment Generation
- Agro-processing & Agribusiness: Modernize agriculture and create jobs in packaging, logistics, and export
- Light Manufacturing: Support textile, furniture, and construction materials for domestic and export markets
- Digital Services & BPO: Train youth for remote work in tech, finance, and customer service
- Renewable Energy & Green Jobs: Solar installation, maintenance, and eco-tourism development
B. Regional Trade Hubs
Establish USAOIT-backed trade facilitation centers in key regions (e.g., Douala, Bafoussam, Garoua) to:
- Support Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) with export readiness
- Provide training and certification
- Host job fairs and matchmaking events
-
Skills Development & Youth Empowerment
A. National Skills Acceleration Program
Partner with U.S. institutions and Cameroonian universities to deliver:
- Vocational training (construction, welding, ICT)
- Soft skills (communication, leadership, entrepreneurship)
- Trade literacy (customs, export documentation, compliance)
B. Youth Enterprise Incubators
Launch USAOIT-supported incubators in each region to:
- Mentor youth-led startups
- Provide seed funding and market access
- Link to diaspora investors and U.S. partners
-
Infrastructure for Employment
A. Labor-Intensive Public Works
Collaborate with the government to prioritize:
- Road rehabilitation
- Water access projects
- School and clinic construction
Use local labor and materials to maximize employment
B. Industrial Zones & Export Parks
Advocate for special economic zones with:
- Tax incentives for job-creating industries
- On-site training centers
- Preferential access to U.S. markets via AGOA
-
MSME Formalization & Access to Finance
A. MSME Employment Compact
Formalize 100,000+ micro-enterprises through:
- Simplified registration
- Digital bookkeeping tools
- Access to USAOIT-backed trade finance
B. Why MSMEs Matter
- Job creation: They absorb large numbers of youth and informal workers
- Innovation: MSMEs are agile and often pioneer new products or services
- Local development: They stimulate regional economies and reduce urban migration
- Trade readiness: MSMEs benefit from capacity-building programs to access global markets
C. Employment-Linked Credit Schemes
Partner with banks to offer:
- Low-interest loans tied to job creation metrics
- Credit guarantees for youth and women entrepreneurs
-
Monitoring, Policy Reform & Diaspora Engagement
A. Employment Intelligence Dashboard
- Track job creation, sectoral growth, and youth participation
- Use data to inform policy and USAOIT interventions
B. Diaspora Employment Corps
Mobilize skilled Cameroonians abroad to:
- Mentor local entrepreneurs
- Invest in job-generating ventures
- Facilitate U.S.–Cameroon business linkages
-
Governance & Implementation
- Lead Agency: USAOIT in partnership with Cameroon’s Ministry of Employment and Vocational Training
- Stakeholders: Regional governments, chambers of commerce, youth councils, diaspora networks
- Timeline: 5-year phased rollout with annual impact reviews
- Funding: Blended finance from Cameroon government, European Union, U.S. development agencies, private investors, and trade revenues
-
Expected 5-Year Impact
Metric Target Jobs Created 1.2 million MSMEs Formalized 100,000+ Youth Trained 500,000 Export Hubs Operational 6 Diaspora Ventures Supported 1,000+ 
-
USAOIT invites:
- Government collaboration for policy alignment
- U.S. and African investors for trade-based job creation
- Development partners to co-finance employment infrastructure
- Diaspora leaders to co-create the future of work in Cameroon

