World Youth Skills Day 2025
It’s World Youth Skills Day 2025! Each July 15th, NYF commemorates World Youth Skills Day to highlight the need for practical skills training among young adults in Nepal for gainful employment and entrepreneurship.
The need is urgent and significant—as across Nepal, a quiet crisis has been unfolding for years.
In 2014, the number of young Nepalis seeking work outside of the country surpassed 500,000. That’s over 1.6% of Nepal’s entire population. That annual number has continued to rise steadily in the years since, crossing 750,000 this past year (2.5%).
Families Separated, Futures Risked
This rising outward migration is due to limited job access within Nepal’s borders, leaving millions of young Nepali people feeling like they had no choice but to search for work abroad. Today, an estimated 3.5 million Nepalis (14% of Nepal’s population) are working abroad in unsafe and exploitative conditions in countries like Malaysia, India, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. That means over half of Nepali households have at least one family member working overseas.
Unfortunately, the process of securing these jobs can be quite expensive. Even more, when young people arrive to begin working, the positions are often very different than expected. Most of these workers end up taking on grueling labor jobs. Employers frequently take advantage of these workers’ low bargaining power. Sadly, stories of wage theft, trafficking, inhumane working conditions, and physical abuse are common.
The Solution: NYF’s Vocational Education & Career Counseling
Ironically, lucrative job opportunities do exist in Nepal. There’s just a shortage of accessible skills training opportunities, especially in remote areas. This is where NYF’s Vocational Education and Career Counseling program comes in—not as a response, but as a solution.
Our VECC program links motivated young adults with the holistic resources and training they need to start lucrative careers in Nepal’s growing economy. Our Vocational School provides high-quality, hands-on training in fields like electrical work, plumbing, welding, tailoring, carpentry, and greenhouse farming.
This past year alone, over 1,000 young adults received services from NYF’s VECC program!

35th Anniversary Year Celebration: Alumni Spotlight
As of this July, NYF is officially in its 35th Anniversary Year. In celebration of this milestone, we’ll be spending these next 12 months highlighting our alumni and the incredible work they’ve done since receiving our support. (To view all the stories we’ve published so far, please visit: https://nyf.news/35years.)
This World Youth Skills Day, we’re spotlighting Shital Chaudary, who is an alumna of the Olgapuri Vocational School Electrical Program. She received NYF support between April and June 2022, when she was the only woman in a group of 23 trainees in a village-based Electrician Training Course. She thrived in the course and earned her electrician’s certification.
Read Shital Chaudhary’s full story below

World Youth Skills Day Spotlight: Shital Chaudhary
Shital Chaudhary grew up in a very traditional home in southwestern Nepal. Unfortunately, this meant that, as a girl, her aspirations and well-being were given very low priority. Money was tight, and any extra resources were saved for her brothers.
Even without support at home, Shital was a bright and motivated student. She scored well on the challenging Secondary Education Exam (SEE, or “Iron Gate”) at the end of the 10th grade. Only about 50% of students pass this rigorous exam, and these rates are even lower in rural areas.
But a few short months into the 11th grade, Shital’s dreams were crushed when her family forced her to drop out of school and marry a local man. She became completely financially dependent on her husband, who refused to pay for even the basic necessities for Shital or their baby son.
Everything changed when Shital learned that NYF was bringing a village-based Electrical Training Course to her area in 2022. She quickly signed up, completely unfazed at being the only woman in a group of 23 trainees. The program provided her with technical skills, as well as the confidence and dignity she had long been denied.
Shital thrived in the course, which became the foundation for a remarkable personal and professional transformation. She enjoys a place of high respect within her family, and her son is enrolled in a good school. And her personal mission has expanded.
After earning her electrician’s certification, Shital was immediately hired at a construction company in Kathmandu. She worked there for 10 months. When NYF expanded the Olgapuri Vocational School Electrical program, we asked if she’d been willing to join our staff as an instructor.
Today, Shital is employed at NYF as an electrical trainer. She helps other young adults access the same life-changing opportunities she once received. Most importantly, Shital is making an incredible impact by empowering youth to stay in Nepal and build a future at home.
She shares a powerful message to the NYF Community that is fitting for World Youth Skills Day 2025: “Not everyone can pursue higher education, but vocational training can change lives in just a few months. If the next generation combines education with practical skills, there are endless opportunities right here in Nepal and youths do not have to migrate abroad and leave their families and communities to earn a living. Be true, disciplined, and work selflessly. Success will follow you. We don’t need to go abroad to find happiness—we can build our dreams right here at home.”