The crisis in youth employment
29/10/15
On October 8th, 2015, the
International Labour Organisation (ILO) published the latest report which said
that despite the modest recovery in the period from 2012 to 2014, the
unemployment rate among young people is much higher in comparison with the
period before the crisis.
Under title “Trends of youth employment
globally in 2015”, the report noted that the unemployment rate of young people
worldwide has remained stable at 13% after an increase in the period from 2007
to 2010 but still higher than the 11.7% level before the crisis. The report
also highlighted the decline number of unemployed young people at 73.3 million
people in 2014, down by 3.3 million in comparison with 76.6 million people at
the peak of the crisis in 2009.
To compare with 2012, the rate of youth
unemployment fell by 1.4 percentage points in the developed economies and the
European Union; and 0.5 percentage points or less in Central and South-Eastern
Europe (non-EU) and in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), Latin
America and the Caribbean, sub-Saharan Africa. Other areas, such as East Asia,
Southeast Asia and the Pacific, the Middle East and North Africa have recorded
an increase in unemployment over the period 2012 - 2014 or no change in South
Asia.
Despite the decline in the number of
unemployed young people due to the narrowing of the young labor force, the
youth unemployment rate is still high. According to the report, this rate will
increase slightly to 13.1% in 2015.
“It is encouraging to see that the trend in
employment of youth is improved in comparison with the 2013 report” - Sara
Elder, lead author of the report said. "But we should not lack vigilance by
the fact that the recovery is not common and almost 43% of young labor forces
in the world is made up of the unemployed, people are living in poverty. It is not
always easy for young people to start on the current labor market”.
In addition, the report also confirmed that
the global proportion of youth in the total labor force, whether employed or
unemployed, also decreased over time, partly due to the reason that many young
people still enrolled.
However, in low-income countries, millions of
young people continue to leave school and begin working when they are still too
young. According to the report, 31% of youth in low-income countries do not
have a degree, compared with 6% in the lower middle income countries and 2% in
the high-income country average.
The report also highlighted a gap existing
between the sexes, the participation rate of young women is lower than that of
young men in most of the region.
Moreover, the rapid change of technology,
forms of labor and employment relations... requires continuous adaptation to
the new conditions of the labor market to solve the problem of skills.
According to reports, giving young people the
best opportunity to access to a job also includes investment in education and
training of the highest quality, equipment young people with the appropriate
skills in labor market requirements, giving them access to social protection
and basic services, as well as harmonize the rules for all the young people who
have ambition can get productive jobs whether they belong gender, income level
or economic - social backgrounds.
All comments [ 5 ]
although overcoming the crisis, the world economy still recovery slowly and uncertainly
many countries's economy faces difficulties and challenges, so high unemployment rates is inevitable
recovery of the US economy has been better, which leads to the reduction of unemployment rate
actually, it's very dificult for young people to apply for a job. many companies and enterprises have bankrupted
the high umployment rates will causes many problems in society, which many goverments feel deadlock
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