“…In essence, Mozambique and many other SSA countries, through their development plans, assume that poverty reduction through improvements in earnings and productivity is only possible in the private wage employment and in agriculture sectors (or at least it is so much higher in these that only these two sectors warrant attention). 11 However, as the analysis of Fox et al (2013) has shown, given the rapid growth of the labour force in low-and middle-income SSA, there is virtually no possibility that wage employment alone will absorb new entrants to the labour force, even if policies were able to generate an employment growth as rapid as Vietnam achieved between 1990 and 2010. Mozambique, with a poorlyeducated labour force and limited infrastructure, is even further behind countries such as Ghana and Kenya, where private wage employment is over 10% of total primary employment.…”