Wednesday, April 15, 2020
No Summer Work For The YoungBecause They Arent Looking
No Summer Work For The Youngâ"Because They Aren't Looking Unemployment among young Americans fell to its lowest level since 2007 last monthâ"but the explanation may not be one youâd expect. According to the U.S. Labor Department, the unemployment rate among people in the 16-to-24 age category fell to 12.2% this July from 14.3% a year ago; the Wall Street Journal reports that itâs now in line with the historic national average for unemployment. But the rate of Americans in this age group actually participating in the work force is just 60%, or 9% less than the historic national average for labor force participation. In short: Fewer young people are marked as âunemployedâ this summer because fewer young people are looking for jobs. This marks a departure from the former summer status quo. Up until about 2003, the rate of labor-force participation among young Americans exceeded that of the general adult population. Summer workâ"as a waiter, an ice cream scooper, a lifeguard, a summer camp counselorâ"was a rite of passage. Now, summer employment among the young not only lags behind employment for adults generally, itâs also on the decline. The WSJ offers up a few possible explanations for this phenomenon: young people may be dissuaded from pursuing jobs by having to compete with older, more skilled workers who were laid off during the recession. They could also be volunteering, âvolunteeringâ as unpaid interns, traveling, studying, or just reading a book poolside. Slate offers up another reason for the demise of the teen summer job: the automation of entry-level jobs. Whatever the reason, one thing seems certain: summerâs getting less lucrative. Read next: Hereâs Why the Summer Job is Disappearing
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