Algeria’s government has ordered a probe into barriers preventing young people from accessing unemployment benefits, highlighting challenges in implementing a program designed to support first-time job seekers amid persistently high youth unemployment.
On March 8, President Abdelmadjid Tebboune instructed the youth minister to investigate obstacles to the National Youth Employment Allowance, a scheme launched in February 2022 by the National Employment Agency (ANEM). The program provides a monthly stipend of 18,000 dinars (about US$138) to eligible young Algerians who have no income, are registered with ANEM for at least six months, and agree not to refuse two job offers that match their profile.
Applications are submitted exclusively through the government’s digital platform, minha.anem.dz. However, many potential beneficiaries drop out before their applications are reviewed, creating the first major bottleneck in program delivery. Officials acknowledge that the digital system, while intended to streamline processing, has in some cases limited access for candidates with lower digital literacy or unreliable internet connectivity.
Despite these challenges, figures suggest progress. At a parliamentary employment session in April 2024, Labor Minister Fayçal Bentaleb reported that 2,823,043 young people had received the allowance since the program’s inception. Of these, 435,475 found jobs and 368,322 entered vocational training programs. In 2024 alone, 37,602 beneficiaries were hired a 51% increase from 2023.
Yet the overall picture remains complex. While the allowance provides immediate financial support, most recipients have yet to secure stable employment, underscoring the structural difficulties of Algeria’s labor market. Youth unemployment among those aged 15–24 approached 30% in 2024, nearly twice the global average, according to World Bank data. Concurrently, around 28% of economic activity occurs in the informal sector, limiting eligibility for benefits tied to formal employment records.
The government’s new National Youth Plan for 2026–2029, unveiled the same day as the presidential directive, aims to expand opportunities for young Algerians and reduce unemployment. However, the gap between policy ambition and on-the-ground implementation remains stark. Officials stress that the audit of the allowance program is intended to identify inefficiencies and improve access, but observers caution that bureaucratic inertia could limit the impact of any reforms.
Rising allowance payments reflect the state’s growing financial commitment to youth support. The stipend increased to 18,000 dinars per month in January 2026, reinforcing the government’s intent to provide meaningful relief for young job seekers while encouraging labor market participation.
The probe ordered by President Tebboune highlights the tension between rapid policy rollout and administrative capacity. ANEM must process millions of applications while ensuring compliance with eligibility rules, a task complicated by regional disparities, technological limitations, and the challenge of tracking beneficiaries in the informal economy.
Analysts say that addressing bottlenecks is crucial if Algeria is to make meaningful progress in reducing youth unemployment. Without improvements in digital infrastructure, application processing, and outreach to rural and underserved areas, a significant portion of eligible young people may continue to be excluded from benefits.
The program illustrates both the promise and the limits of state interventions in the Algerian labor market. While the allowance provides immediate relief and encourages training and employment engagement, systemic challenges — including high informal sector participation and administrative hurdles — remain significant obstacles to achieving the broader goal of sustainable youth employment.
As Algeria seeks to balance ambitious social policies with effective implementation, the government’s audit will be closely watched by citizens, policymakers, and international observers eager to see whether administrative reforms can match political commitment.