South Africa's tech sector faces a severe skills crisis, with unfilled AI and data science jobs amid high youth unemployment. HyperionDev CEO Riaz Moola proposes bootcamps as a 'finishing school' for computer science graduates to bridge the gap. The shortage could cost the economy up to R124-billion by 2027.
South Africa's tech talent pipeline is under strain, producing ambitious graduates but failing to equip them with job-ready skills. Riaz Moola, founding CEO of HyperionDev, describes the issue as an 'outcomes problem' rather than a lack of ambition. He positions his coding bootcamp as a 'finishing school' for computer science students from institutions like UCT, Wits, and Stellenbosch University, which he says focus on theory over practical application.
The scale of the crisis is stark: youth unemployment exceeds 60%, yet 45,000 AI and data science positions remain vacant. A Synesys analysis warns of R124-billion in economic losses by 2027 due to the AI skills shortage. The 2024 JCSE-IITPSA ICT Skills Survey highlights a 'chronic skills shortage' driving companies to outsource, exporting capital instead of creating local jobs. Moola notes that software developers in South Africa earn highly relative to living costs, second only to the US, in a nation with the world's highest inequality.
Universities teach the 'grammar of computing'—algorithms and proofs—but neglect workplace tools like GitHub deployment or AWS setup, according to Moola. UCT Dean of Science, Professor Hussein Suleman, agrees that computer science education aims to create 'tool builders,' not just 'tool users,' though businesses demand immediate productivity. HyperionDev has partnered with Stellenbosch University to offer vocational training, including 'human-led code review' for mentorship. Moola admits early courses were too challenging and has since made them more accessible: 'Mentorship is not a “nice to have” in technical education, it’s a performance lever.'
Competitors like tuition-free WeThinkCode, led by CEO Ashmita Singh, and stipend-paying Umuzi offer alternatives. WeThinkCode, with partnerships from Google and Meta, signed a letter of intent with the Department of Higher Education and Training to build an ecosystem. HyperionDev's premium courses cost R25,000 to R80,000, with income-share options and university white-labelling for credibility. Despite fixes, challenges persist: 40% of local developers work remotely for foreign firms, and underutilized ICT talent carries a R11.5-trillion lifetime cost.