Building Resilient Public Sectors in Africa: Leveraging Employee Motivation to Tackle Brain Drain in a Global Talent Landscape

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Abstract

The global competition for skilled talent has intensified, posing significant challenges to public sector resilience, especially in regions such as Africa where the phenomenon of brain drain, commonly known as the ‘JAPA Syndrome,’ has reached critical levels. This paper examines how African governments can build resilient public institutions by addressing the root causes of talent flight through enhanced employee motivation strategies. Focusing on both intrinsic and extrinsic motivational factors, the study compares employee retention approaches in African public sectors with successful models from Europe, identifying actionable lessons for African policymakers. It argues that improving salaries, strengthening career progression frameworks, fostering workplace recognition cultures, and offering meaningful professional development opportunities can transform the public sector into an attractive, resilient employer capable of withstanding global migration pressures. This paper contributes to the broader conversation by demonstrating how innovative human resource strategies can help public institutions adapt to disruptive talent flows, while fostering long-term service quality and governance stability. Ultimately, it calls for a reimagined African public sector, one that competes effectively in the global talent marketplace while serving as a cornerstone of national development.

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