A THIRD OF YOUTH THINK THEY HAVE NO CHANCE OF GETTING A JOB! ‘Revolution the only way’ say YS

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Young Socialists ‘March for Jobs’ in Swindon
Young Socialists ‘March for Jobs’ in Swindon

UNEMPLOYED youngsters want to work, but a survey carried on behalf of the Univercity College Union (UCU) shows a third fear they never will.

Nine in 10 ‘NEETs’ (Not in Employment, Education or Training) aspire to be in work, education or training but a third feel they have ‘no chance’ of ever getting a job

Of those surveyed: 37% rarely leave house, 40% feel they are ‘not part of society’, 33% have suffered depression and 15% have a mental health condition.

As well, 71% say with the right support they could contribute ‘a lot to this country’, but want help boosting their confidence and better information and advice about their options

A third of young people currently not in employment, education or training fear they will never get a job, despite the vast majority of them wanting to work or train, according to a new report released today.

The University and College Union (UCU) described the results of the survey of more than 1,000 young people as ‘heartbreaking’ and called for a new contract between society and the young.

The polling, carried out by ComRes and commissioned as part of the union’s Knowledge Economy campaign, paints a startling picture of the reality of life for the one million young people in England not working or training.

While they are a highly diverse group with different needs, the overwhelming majority want to work or study (88%) and over two-thirds (71%) believe they would contribute a lot to society if they got the right support.

However, the survey also reveals the substantial human and social cost of sustained unemployment with more than a third (36%) believing they would never get a job.

A third (33%) reported having suffered depression, while 37% said they rarely left the house and two-fifths (40%) said they did not feel they were part of society.

When asked what they considered to be the main barriers stopping them finding work or study almost half (47%) said their lack of experience held them back, a quarter (25%) said they lacked confidence, and more than one in four (28%) cited a lack of suitable well-paid jobs.

Research shows the individual human tragedy is only part of the story and that a NEET will cost the Exchequer £56,000.

UCU said politicians urgently needed to listen to young people surveyed who made it clear what they felt needed to be done.

When asked what would help them find work or training opportunities, almost half (46%) said they needed help to boost their confidence and over a third (36%) wanted a motivational boost.

One in three (29%) said they wanted decent advice about applying for jobs and a quarter (23%) cited clear information about opportunities as a real step forward.

Speaking in response to the report Professor Robin Simmons of the University of Huddersfield, an expert in the so-called NEET phenomenon, said: ‘This report’s findings are both disturbing and sobering, and clearly illustrate the negative consequences for the individual and society of being outside education and employment.

‘The research illustrates the corrosive effect that unemployment can have on a young person’s confidence, motivation, and their view of the future.

‘Most NEET young people do not have low aspirations and believe they can make a valuable contribution to society.

‘Whilst some young unemployed people may well lack confidence this is often a result of negative labour market experiences and repeated negative experiences can cause their motivation to drop.

‘A significant proportion of young people outside education and work possess high-level skills and qualifications, which suggests that youth unemployment is related as much to the availability of employment and the particular nature of jobs available to young people as it is to their individual and personal qualities and dispositions.’

UCU president, Simon Renton, said: ‘This report lays bare the deep personal impact that sustained unemployment has on young people.

‘It is truly heartbreaking to see so many people who want to contribute more to society but are left feeling their outlook is desperate and hopeless.

‘The individual human tragedy is only part of the story as young people outside education or work cost the country millions of pounds every year.

‘We need to give our young people a commitment of proper guidance and stable, properly rewarded jobs, or educational opportunities.

‘This will mean central and local government, employers, schools, colleges and universities working together.

‘It will cost money, but the alternative is to consign hundreds of thousands of young people to the scrapheap and leave society to pick up the both the social and economic bills caused by their inactivity.’

ComRes interviewed 1,004 UK 16-24 year olds online who are not in education, employment or training between 24 June and 4 July 2013.

Data were weighted to be representative of all those aged 16-24 not in education, employment or training in the UK.

Meanwhile, the National Union of Students has also commented on the dire consequences of youth unemployment.

It said that the social and financial costs of so many young people being unemployed at the start of their working lives threatened the UK’s economy in both the short and long-term.

A study released last year estimated the lifetime cost to the economy of 16-18 year old NEETs in just one year (2008) to be somewhere between £22bn and £77bn.

The NUS said that a further increase in apprenticeships, the restoration of the Education Maintenance Allowance (EMA), the protection of the Care-to-Learn support for teenage parents and ensuring that properly paid internships were available, were simple, cost-effective solutions that could be put in place quickly.

Toni Pearce, NUS Vice-President (Further Education), said: ‘It’s clear that there is a crisis in youth unemployment and that the Government needs to take concrete action immediately.

‘It is not enough to simply tell young people to wait until things improve as they watch their futures slip away.

‘Evidence shows that when young people fall into unemployment it holds them back for the rest of their lives, so the Government must do something to address these problems now.

‘Restoring EMA, protecting Care-to-Learn, increasing, even doubling the number of new apprenticeships and properly enforcing minimum wage legislation for internships are common sense actions that would have real and immediate effects.’

A recent TUC report called ‘The UK’s Low Pay Recovery’, revealed that out of the 587,000 net rise in jobs created since June 2010 under the coalition government, roughly four in five were in industries with average wages of less than £7.95 per hour, like retail, waitressing and residential care.

The ‘living wage’, the estimated salary for a worker to meet basic needs, is £7.45 per hour outside of London and £8.55 per hour in London. But the legal minimum is £6.55 per hour.

The sobering findings come from the latest analysis published by the TUC as part of their report

The figures are cited as proof that the coalition’s strategy for an economic recovery’ isn’t working’.

Yesterday Young Socialist National Secretary Joshua Ogunleye said that the UCU’s findings show that, ‘youth know that we have no future under capitalism.

‘Our generation is not heartbroken or defeated – we are furious!

‘We have had enough of being treated worse than dirt, told that we have no right to have homes, education or housing, that we have to work for free for months at places like Marks & Spencers with nothing but the empty “promise” that there might be a job at the end of it.

‘Our generation is revolutionary, we must build the Young Socialists to fight alongside workers to bring down this hated government and their whole rotten system.

‘Then we can establish a workers government and a socialist society, where youth are valued and can make a decent life for themselves.’