Scores of unemployed South African doctors and pharmacists gathered in central Johannesburg on Friday, demanding urgent government action to address a mounting employment crisis in the country’s health sector.
JOHANNESBURG — Early on Friday morning, a crowd of unemployed medical graduates — including doctors, pharmacists, physiotherapists and nurses — gathered outside a major government building in central Johannesburg, chanting and holding placards demanding job opportunities within South Africa’s strained public health system.
The demonstration, circulating widely on social media and captured in a YouTube video titled “Unemployed doctors and pharmacists demand employment,” reflects growing frustration among young professionals who have completed years of study but remain without stable work. The video link was posted online on Friday and has begun drawing attention to the crisis facing health graduates nationwide.
South Africa’s unemployment rate has hovered near record highs for several years, with youth unemployment particularly acute. According to Statistics South Africa, the national unemployment rate stood at 32.9% in the third quarter of 2025, with those aged 15–24 experiencing rates above 50%. While specific figures for health graduates are not routinely disaggregated, anecdotal reports suggest that thousands of newly qualified health professionals remain underemployed or working in non-clinical roles.
At the protest, participants spoke of years spent in rigorous training at universities and teaching hospitals, only to find limited openings in both public and private health facilities. One protester, Thabo Mokoena, a newly qualified physician from KwaZulu-Natal, said the situation was both demoralizing and economically untenable.
“We trained to save lives; we did not train to beg for jobs. With so many vacancies in clinics and hospitals, it makes no sense that qualified doctors roam the streets unemployed,” Mokoena said.
Experts point to a mismatch between the pace of training and the availability of funded posts in the public health sector. Dr. Lerato Mthembu, a health policy analyst at the University of the Witwatersrand, said budget constraints and administrative bottlenecks have slowed hiring despite chronic staffing shortages in many parts of the country.
“South Africa continues to train competent health professionals, but our health system has structural hiring issues that prevent these graduates from being absorbed,” Mthembu said. “Without targeted policy and budget adjustments, this cycle will continue.”
The health ministry, when reached for comment, acknowledged the issue but pointed to competing fiscal pressures as a limiting factor. “We recognise the concerns of health graduates and are working with provincial departments to prioritise critical positions, but this must align with the broader public service budget framework,” a ministry spokesperson said.
Labour economists say the protest underscores broader challenges facing South Africa’s youth, where high unemployment has persisted despite periodic economic growth. Critics argue that targeted stimulus programmes and partnerships with private health providers could help absorb trained professionals into productive work.
Organisers of Friday’s demonstration plan to deliver a memorandum to national government officials next week, outlining concrete proposals for increasing health sector hiring and creating transitional roles for recent graduates.
“This is not just about jobs,” said protest coordinator Naledi Selowa. “It’s about dignity, public health outcomes, and the future of healthcare in South Africa.”
As the protest winds down, the question remains whether the government will respond with policy changes or budget reallocations. For many jobless graduates, the wait for stable employment continues — with personal and social consequences that stretch beyond the picket line.