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Ahmed Chami (left), former general
manager of MS North Africa, hands Hakima El Moutafih her diploma from
Microsoft during the Diplômés Chômeurs graduation ceremony last year. |
In Morocco, where the unemployment rate exceeds 20 percent, a good education
-- even a graduate degree -- provides no guarantee of a job. Many well-educated
Moroccans suffer long-term unemployment -- some for as long as 10 years. And
while approximately 30 million people live in this North African nation, there
are only about 300,000 PCs and 50,000 Internet accounts -- a challenge and an
opportunity for the information-technology (IT) industry. Through Microsoft's
International Community Affairs program, Microsoft employees in Morocco took
time out of their daily jobs to craft and execute a plan that would bring many
unemployed educated professionals into the IT industry. The year-old Unemployed
Graduates Program (also called Diplômés Chômeurs) helps university graduates who
have been out of work for more than a year obtain IT certification and get a job
in the IT industry.
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