Skills Passport Tech: SADC's Qualifications Framework to Digitise Cross-Border Talent
 
                                As African fintechs revolutionize remittances and payment rails, a parallel, long-overdue effort is aiming to digitize the continent's most valuable asset: human capital. Technical discussions at MIDSA 2025 have pivoted from merely tracking human movement to transforming migrants into a potent, accessible economic workforce across Southern Africa.
Central to this economic transformation is the SADC Regional Qualifications Framework. Frantz Celestin, IOM Regional Director, championed the initiative, noting that the Framework is actively "aligning education, training, and employment systems so that skills gained in one country are recognised across borders". He termed this a prime example of "migration working for development".
For a continent grappling with an "access to talent" challenge in high-growth sectors, particularly as global investors prioritize efficient scaling, a digitized regional 'skills passport' is a crucial next step. It promises to dismantle the friction that currently prevents skilled migrants from contributing formally to new markets, thereby boosting regional GDP and providing crucial labor market data for economic planners.
The initiative directly addresses the challenge of making movement "safe, regular, and productive" for the 70% of the population under 35, ensuring the necessary technical infrastructure is in place to enable truly frictionless labour mobility.
 
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                                    Francis                                 
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
        
             
        
             
        
             
        
             
        
             
        
             
        
 
        
 
        
 
        
 
        
 
        
                                        
                                     
        
 
        
 
        
 
        
