Kenyan graduates turn to AI tools for farming as jobs dry up
Article excerpt
Facing a job market with few openings, Kenyan university graduates are pivoting to agriculture and arming themselves with AI-powered mobile apps to boost yields and profitability. Young farmers are deploying technology like soil sensors, weather forecasting algorithms, and crop-management software, tools once confined to wealthy agribusinesses, to transform small plots into viable businesses. The shift reflects a larger reality: formal employment has stalled, forcing educated workers to reimagine what a career means. By blending traditional farming knowledge with cutting-edge analytics, these graduates are creating income streams while addressing food security. It's a workaround born of necessity, not choice.