Pakistan produces a massive number of ICT graduates annually. However, a severe disconnect exists between academic training and actual industry demands. The Minister for Information Technology and Telecommunications, Shaza Fatima Khawaja, recently acknowledged this persistent gap. Consequently, this mismatch causes inconsistent skill standards, crippled employer confidence, and bottlenecks in scaling Pakistan’s high-value IT exports. To tackle this crisis directly, the government launched the National Skill Competency Test (NSCT) for IT Graduates.
Launching the Standardization Framework
Following the Prime Minister’s directives, authorities formed a Steering Committee in November 2025. This committee oversaw the planning, coordination, and execution of the NSCT. Key stakeholders drove the initiative, including the HEC, MoITT, PSEB, P@SHA, NCEAC, and Virtual University (VU).
Together, they operationalized this flagship national initiative through a comprehensive, time-bound exercise. P@SHA provided direct input to develop the competency framework. Ultimately, the NSCT serves as a standardized assessment to benchmark graduates against real industry standards and deliver objective certification of their technical proficiency.
National Skill Competency Test: Execution & Statistics
The government successfully executed the NSCT last month, in April 2026. Authorities ran the assessment as a fully synchronized, computer-based test using the Virtual University platform. The scale of the operation was significant.
The test covered 112 cities across Pakistan, utilizing 165 test centers. VU deployed 592 invigilation staff nationwide. Furthermore, over 190 universities participated. Out of 40,784 registered students, 33,038 appeared for the test, marking an 81% attendance rate. Administrators divided the testing into four daily sessions from 09:00 AM to 04:30 PM. Each candidate faced 100 questions within a 120-minute duration. Meanwhile, HEC, MoITT, PAS (providing 3rd-party validation), and P@SHA closely monitored the process.
Strategic Outcomes for Pakistan’s IT Sector
The NSCT achieved several immediate goals. First, it generated credible, standardized national-level data to benchmark CS/IT programs. Second, it established a verified national IT talent pool that the industry can easily access. Furthermore, the initiative structured academia-industry engagement and provided actionable data for curriculum improvement.
Moving forward, the test establishes a foundation to tie institutional evaluation and future funding directly to performance. Authorities expect this verified skill validation to drastically improve graduate employability and rebuild international confidence in Pakistani IT talent. Consequently, this will drive more graduates toward advanced domains like AI, cybersecurity, cloud computing, and data science, ultimately strengthening Pakistan’s overall IT export potential.
