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Youth unemployment in Italy

Youth unemployment in Italy discusses the statistics, trends, causes and consequences of unemployment among young Italians. Italy displays one of the highest rates of youth unemployment among the 35 member countries of the Organization of Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD).[1] The Italian youth unemployment rate started raising dramatically since the 2008 financial crisis reaching its peak of 42.67% in 2014.[2][3] In 2017, among the EU member states, the youth unemployment rate of Italy (35.1%) was exceeded by only Spain and Greece. The Italian youth unemployment rate was more than the double of the total EU average rate of 16.7% in 2017.[4] While youth unemployment is extremely high compared to EU standards, the Italian total unemployment rate (11.1%) is closer to EU average (7.4%).[5]

Statistics edit

Youth unemployment in Italy can be quantified by many measures. According to the World Bank, the youth unemployment rate is 34.726% as of September 27, 2018.[6] Throughout Italy's history of tracking youth unemployment (1983 to 2018), the average percentage has been 30%.[7] Between 1994 and 2000, youth unemployment averaged 33% [7] In certain regions of Italy, especially the southern region of Calabria, the unemployment rate is higher than the rest of the country. As of 2017, Calabria has the highest rate of youth unemployment in the country with 55.6% of the population unemployed between the ages of 15 and 24.[8] In contrast, the 2017 statistic for the lowest rate of youth unemployment was recorded in the northern region of Italy in Trentino-South Tyrol at 14.4%.[9] In 2017, nearly 1 in 5 young Italians were considered to be in the group of unemployed, not looking for employment, and not enrolled in school.[10] In 2017, young Italian families were shown to have a stronger chance of living without income or in complete poverty.[11] Nearly 60% of these families belonged to the generalized group of "new entrants", or rather workers that were attempting to join the labor market for the first time.[12] These young Italians and their families are nearly 3.5 times more likely to be unemployed than older Italians.[13] When compared to the ratio of Germany (1.5 times more likely), young Italians have a much higher chance to remain unemployed.[13] Jobs for young Italians are in great demand in Italy, with certain financial positions receiving 85,000 applications and accepting only 30 candidates.[14] Certain Italian hospital positions have received 7,000 applications and accepted only 10 candidates.[14] These examples of limited employment positions are representative of the day-to-day conditions that young Italians face when searching for employment.

Historically, 40.3% of 15–24 year-olds who were actively part of the labor force were unemployed in 2015.

[15] 22% of the same population had been unemployed for 12 or more months, meaning more than half of the unemployed active Italian youth had been so long-term.[16] Yet another subset of the youth population is neither in employment nor in education and training (NEET), which in 2015 represented 21.4% of Italy's 15–24 year-olds.[17] In addition to complete unemployment, Italian youth also have high levels of underemployment. The number of 15–24 year-olds who worked full-time (30 hours per week) dropped from 1,597,000 in 2000 to 676,000 in 2015, while the number of part-time workers increased from 172,000 to 237,000 people.[18] Furthermore, 83.7% of the young part-time workers in 2015 did so involuntarily because they could not find full-time employment.[19]

 

Transition from education to employment

The transition period from school to work has been cited as a primary cause of youth unemployment in Italy. The Italian education system has been blamed for being unable to provide work experience.[12] Many students who graduate from secondary education in Italy are overqualified for the jobs available to them, especially in manufacturing and export sectors.[20] Consequently many of the youth are limited to either temporary work or unemployment.[20] By 2010, temporary contracts accounted for 50% of the youth in Italy, which only facilitated the churning of unemployment and increased the transition period between going back to school and finding a full-time job.[20]


Before 2005, the period between graduating from school and the gap between obtaining employment was 51.3 months, which is much higher than the EU average of 30 months.[21] Graduates are then overqualified for the labor market, meaning they have a higher skill level than what is in demand (called a vertical mismatch).[21][22] Young non-university graduates consequently experience higher rates of unemployment (45%) than their degree-holding counterparts (25.6%).[23]

Welfare system and labor market policy edit

Italy's problem of youth unemployment is also caused by its protectionist welfare system and labor market. In 2015, 62.4% 15–24 year-olds who were registered unemployed for 6–11 months did not receive any benefits or assistance; the same rate measured in the population of 15–74 year-olds was 52.4%.[24] Though this demonstrates that benefits are exclusive for people of all ages in Italy, the young unemployed are left out at a rate 10% higher than the general population. This can be attributed to the country's corporatist structure; similarly to Greece, Spain, and Portugal (grouped into the "Southern Model" of European welfare) benefits in Italy are distributed in a very fragmented manner according to occupation.[25] There are separate benefit schemes, or "micro-schemes", for specific private and public sectors, types of self-employment, and the large group of industrial workers called INPS.[25] This system is split into the core group of labor market insiders receives generous benefits (such as pensions), while the irregular workers receive minimal benefits.[25] For example, upon retirement an institutional worker would receive a pension of 89% their average net earnings, but a non-institutional worker would receive only 19%.[25] Paradoxically, this "economic protection" model makes it difficult for young people to get their first job because they have never been part of the labor market.[26] To illustrate, the unemployment benefits given to an Italian 18 year-old who has never had a job is 0% of average net earnings.[25] In addition to receiving nonexistent/minimal benefits, a study also found youth were excluded based on factors including: the prerequisites for coverage, the age coverage is extended to, and sanctions for incorrectly using the system.[26] Italy's model has exclusive unemployment benefits coupled with inflexible labor market policy (which means workers have high employment protection and are unlikely to be fired), which creates inhospitable conditions for young people seeking jobs.[26][27]

Consequences edit

brain drain is one consequence of high unemployment[28][29][30] The high rate of unemployment encourages young citizens to leave the country. In fact, the main reason of the high numbers of young people leaving the country is the prospect of job opportunities abroad.[31] Qualified Italians who choose to emigrate to Northern Europe are able to make between 29% and 48% more than their counterparts who remain in Italy.[32] Youth emigration as a consequence results in the Italian government losing its investments in education and a considerable amount of young labor force.[33] In the majority of the cases, the young unemployed emigrate to either other countries in Europe (mainly the United Kingdom and Germany) or to the United States and Australia. In 2016, more than 39% of Italian emigrants were of age between 18 and 34. Additionally, the percentage of young Italian emigrants is increasing every year at a steady rate.[34]

It is often argued that Italy is made up of two different economies, one belonging to the North and one to the South.[35] In terms of youth unemployment, there is a regional divide between North and South within Italy. In 2016, Italy presented one of the most internally diverse regional unemployment rates among the EU member states (together with other Southern European countries such as Greece and Spain). More than half of the young population was unemployed in the southern regions of Italy (Calabria, Campania, Puglia and Sicilia).[8] On the other hand, unemployment rates in the northern regions (such as Lombardia, Piemonte and Veneto) varied between 5% and 10%.[36][37]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Ocse, l'Italia è il terzo posto peggiore per i giovani che cercano lavoro". La Repubblica.it. 2017-10-10. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  2. ^ "Youth unemployment rate". OECD. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  3. ^ "Il lavoro negli anni della crisi: l'Italia paga il conto, la disoccupazione è cresciuta del 108%". Repubblica.it. 2015-04-27. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  4. ^ "Youth unemployment rate in Europe (EU member states) as of August 2017". Statista. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  5. ^ "Unemployment rates, seasonally adjusted, October 2017 (%)". Eurostat. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  6. ^ "Youth Unemployment Rate for Italy". Economic Research. FRED. 2017-01-01. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  7. ^ a b Costelloe, Kevin (2018-07-02). "Italy Unemployment Rate Falls in Boost for Populist Leaders". Bloomberg. Bloomberg. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  8. ^ a b "Youth unemployment rate in Italy in 2017, by region". Statista. Statista. 2017. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  9. ^ "Youth unemployment rate in Italy in 2017, by region". Statista. Statista. 2017. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  10. ^ Edwards, Catherine (2017-07-18). "Italy has EU's highest level of youth unemployment, study shows". The Local. The Local. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  11. ^ Edwards, Catherine (2017-07-18). "Italy has EU's highest level of youth unemployment, study shows". The Local. The Local. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  12. ^ a b Pastore, Francesco (2012-11-01). "Youth Unemployment in Italy at the Time of the New Great Depression" (PDF). Friedrich Ebert Stiftung. Library.FES. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  13. ^ a b Lange, Marloes; et al. (2014). Youth Labour Market Integration Across Europe. European Societies.
  14. ^ a b Squires, Nick (2017-07-03). "More than 80,000 Italians apply for just 30 bank jobs, as economy remains in doldrums". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  15. ^ "Youth unemployment rate - % of active population aged 15-24". Eurostat. European Commission. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
  16. ^ "Youth long-term unemployment rate (12 months or longer) by sex and age". Eurostat. European Commission. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
  17. ^ "Youth neither in employment nor in education and training (NEET) rate, age group 15-24". Eurostat. European Commission. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
  18. ^ "FTPT employment based on a common definition". OECD.Stat. Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
  19. ^ "Involuntary part-time employment as percentage of the total part-time employment for young people by sex and age". Eurostat. European Commission. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
  20. ^ a b c Dolado, Juan (2015). "No Country for Young People? Youth Labour Market Problems in Europe" (PDF). VoxEU.org. CEPR Press. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  21. ^ a b Pastore, Francesco (2012). "Youth Unemployment in Italy at the Time of the New Great Depression". Friedrerich Ebert Stiftung.
  22. ^ "Employment rates of recent graduates - Statistics Explained". ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 2016-11-29.
  23. ^ "Unemployment rates of young people not in education and training by sex, educational attainment level and years since completion of highest level of education". Eurostat. European Commission. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  24. ^ "Unemployment by sex, age, duration of unemployment and distinction registration/benefits (%)". Eurostat. European Commission. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
  25. ^ a b c d e Ferrera, Maurizio (1996-02-01). "The 'Southern Model' of Welfare in Social Europe". Journal of European Social Policy. 6 (1): 17–37. doi:10.1177/095892879600600102. ISSN 0958-9287. S2CID 154404873.
  26. ^ a b c Cinalli, Manlio; Giugni, Marco (2013-07-01). "New challenges for the welfare state: The emergence of youth unemployment regimes in Europe?". International Journal of Social Welfare. 22 (3): 290–299. doi:10.1111/ijsw.12016. hdl:2434/629674. ISSN 1468-2397. S2CID 55160552.
  27. ^ "OECD Indicators of Employment Protection - OECD". www.oecd.org. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  28. ^ Münz, Rainer (2014). "The global race for talent: Europe's migration challenge". Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  29. ^ "Se ne vanno giovani e laureati: la nostra vita di genitori nell'Italia dei figli lontani". Corriere.it. 2017-09-25. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  30. ^ Carli, Andrea (2017). "Oltre 250mila italiani emigrano all'estero, quasi quanti nel Dopoguerra". Il Sole 24 ORE. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  31. ^ "Lavoro, "il 61% dei giovani italiani pronto a emigrare per cercarlo all'estero"". Il Fatto Quotidiano. 2015-09-12. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  32. ^ "Like Saturn, Italy is Devouring Its Children". Youth Employment Decade. 2018-01-03. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  33. ^ Ricucci, Roberta (2017). The New Southern European Diaspora : Youth, Unemployment, and Migration. Lexington Books.
  34. ^ "Italiani all'estero, nel 2016 emigrati in 124mila: il 39% ha tra i 18 e i 34 anni. Regno Unito meta preferita". Il Fatto Quotidiano. 2017-10-17. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  35. ^ "Italy's regional divide: A tale of two economies". The Economist. 2015-05-16. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  36. ^ "Labour market statistics at regional level". Eurostat. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  37. ^ "Labour Market". Eurostat. Retrieved December 7, 2017.

youth, unemployment, italy, this, article, needs, attention, from, expert, italy, economics, please, reason, talk, parameter, this, template, explain, issue, with, article, wikiproject, italy, wikiproject, economics, able, help, recruit, expert, 2023, discusse. This article needs attention from an expert in Italy or Economics Please add a reason or a talk parameter to this template to explain the issue with the article WikiProject Italy or WikiProject Economics may be able to help recruit an expert May 2023 Youth unemployment in Italy discusses the statistics trends causes and consequences of unemployment among young Italians Italy displays one of the highest rates of youth unemployment among the 35 member countries of the Organization of Economic Co Operation and Development OECD 1 The Italian youth unemployment rate started raising dramatically since the 2008 financial crisis reaching its peak of 42 67 in 2014 2 3 In 2017 among the EU member states the youth unemployment rate of Italy 35 1 was exceeded by only Spain and Greece The Italian youth unemployment rate was more than the double of the total EU average rate of 16 7 in 2017 4 While youth unemployment is extremely high compared to EU standards the Italian total unemployment rate 11 1 is closer to EU average 7 4 5 Contents 1 Statistics 1 1 Welfare system and labor market policy 2 Consequences 3 See also 4 NotesStatistics editYouth unemployment in Italy can be quantified by many measures According to the World Bank the youth unemployment rate is 34 726 as of September 27 2018 6 Throughout Italy s history of tracking youth unemployment 1983 to 2018 the average percentage has been 30 7 Between 1994 and 2000 youth unemployment averaged 33 7 In certain regions of Italy especially the southern region of Calabria the unemployment rate is higher than the rest of the country As of 2017 Calabria has the highest rate of youth unemployment in the country with 55 6 of the population unemployed between the ages of 15 and 24 8 In contrast the 2017 statistic for the lowest rate of youth unemployment was recorded in the northern region of Italy in Trentino South Tyrol at 14 4 9 In 2017 nearly 1 in 5 young Italians were considered to be in the group of unemployed not looking for employment and not enrolled in school 10 In 2017 young Italian families were shown to have a stronger chance of living without income or in complete poverty 11 Nearly 60 of these families belonged to the generalized group of new entrants or rather workers that were attempting to join the labor market for the first time 12 These young Italians and their families are nearly 3 5 times more likely to be unemployed than older Italians 13 When compared to the ratio of Germany 1 5 times more likely young Italians have a much higher chance to remain unemployed 13 Jobs for young Italians are in great demand in Italy with certain financial positions receiving 85 000 applications and accepting only 30 candidates 14 Certain Italian hospital positions have received 7 000 applications and accepted only 10 candidates 14 These examples of limited employment positions are representative of the day to day conditions that young Italians face when searching for employment Historically 40 3 of 15 24 year olds who were actively part of the labor force were unemployed in 2015 15 22 of the same population had been unemployed for 12 or more months meaning more than half of the unemployed active Italian youth had been so long term 16 Yet another subset of the youth population is neither in employment nor in education and training NEET which in 2015 represented 21 4 of Italy s 15 24 year olds 17 In addition to complete unemployment Italian youth also have high levels of underemployment The number of 15 24 year olds who worked full time 30 hours per week dropped from 1 597 000 in 2000 to 676 000 in 2015 while the number of part time workers increased from 172 000 to 237 000 people 18 Furthermore 83 7 of the young part time workers in 2015 did so involuntarily because they could not find full time employment 19 nbsp Transition from education to employmentThe transition period from school to work has been cited as a primary cause of youth unemployment in Italy The Italian education system has been blamed for being unable to provide work experience 12 Many students who graduate from secondary education in Italy are overqualified for the jobs available to them especially in manufacturing and export sectors 20 Consequently many of the youth are limited to either temporary work or unemployment 20 By 2010 temporary contracts accounted for 50 of the youth in Italy which only facilitated the churning of unemployment and increased the transition period between going back to school and finding a full time job 20 Before 2005 the period between graduating from school and the gap between obtaining employment was 51 3 months which is much higher than the EU average of 30 months 21 Graduates are then overqualified for the labor market meaning they have a higher skill level than what is in demand called a vertical mismatch 21 22 Young non university graduates consequently experience higher rates of unemployment 45 than their degree holding counterparts 25 6 23 Welfare system and labor market policy edit Italy s problem of youth unemployment is also caused by its protectionist welfare system and labor market In 2015 62 4 15 24 year olds who were registered unemployed for 6 11 months did not receive any benefits or assistance the same rate measured in the population of 15 74 year olds was 52 4 24 Though this demonstrates that benefits are exclusive for people of all ages in Italy the young unemployed are left out at a rate 10 higher than the general population This can be attributed to the country s corporatist structure similarly to Greece Spain and Portugal grouped into the Southern Model of European welfare benefits in Italy are distributed in a very fragmented manner according to occupation 25 There are separate benefit schemes or micro schemes for specific private and public sectors types of self employment and the large group of industrial workers called INPS 25 This system is split into the core group of labor market insiders receives generous benefits such as pensions while the irregular workers receive minimal benefits 25 For example upon retirement an institutional worker would receive a pension of 89 their average net earnings but a non institutional worker would receive only 19 25 Paradoxically this economic protection model makes it difficult for young people to get their first job because they have never been part of the labor market 26 To illustrate the unemployment benefits given to an Italian 18 year old who has never had a job is 0 of average net earnings 25 In addition to receiving nonexistent minimal benefits a study also found youth were excluded based on factors including the prerequisites for coverage the age coverage is extended to and sanctions for incorrectly using the system 26 Italy s model has exclusive unemployment benefits coupled with inflexible labor market policy which means workers have high employment protection and are unlikely to be fired which creates inhospitable conditions for young people seeking jobs 26 27 Consequences editbrain drain is one consequence of high unemployment 28 29 30 The high rate of unemployment encourages young citizens to leave the country In fact the main reason of the high numbers of young people leaving the country is the prospect of job opportunities abroad 31 Qualified Italians who choose to emigrate to Northern Europe are able to make between 29 and 48 more than their counterparts who remain in Italy 32 Youth emigration as a consequence results in the Italian government losing its investments in education and a considerable amount of young labor force 33 In the majority of the cases the young unemployed emigrate to either other countries in Europe mainly the United Kingdom and Germany or to the United States and Australia In 2016 more than 39 of Italian emigrants were of age between 18 and 34 Additionally the percentage of young Italian emigrants is increasing every year at a steady rate 34 It is often argued that Italy is made up of two different economies one belonging to the North and one to the South 35 In terms of youth unemployment there is a regional divide between North and South within Italy In 2016 Italy presented one of the most internally diverse regional unemployment rates among the EU member states together with other Southern European countries such as Greece and Spain More than half of the young population was unemployed in the southern regions of Italy Calabria Campania Puglia and Sicilia 8 On the other hand unemployment rates in the northern regions such as Lombardia Piemonte and Veneto varied between 5 and 10 36 37 See also editYouth unemployment Unemployment benefits in Italy Labor policy in Italy Youth unemployment in Spain Youth unemployment in the United Kingdom Unemployment in the United KingdomNotes edit Ocse l Italia e il terzo posto peggiore per i giovani che cercano lavoro La Repubblica it 2017 10 10 Retrieved December 7 2017 Youth unemployment rate OECD Retrieved December 7 2017 Il lavoro negli anni della crisi l Italia paga il conto la disoccupazione e cresciuta del 108 Repubblica it 2015 04 27 Retrieved December 7 2017 Youth unemployment rate in Europe EU member states as of August 2017 Statista Retrieved December 7 2017 Unemployment rates seasonally adjusted October 2017 Eurostat Retrieved December 7 2017 Youth Unemployment Rate for Italy Economic Research FRED 2017 01 01 Retrieved 2018 12 10 a b Costelloe Kevin 2018 07 02 Italy Unemployment Rate Falls in Boost for Populist Leaders Bloomberg Bloomberg Retrieved 2018 12 10 a b Youth unemployment rate in Italy in 2017 by region Statista Statista 2017 Retrieved 2018 12 10 Youth unemployment rate in Italy in 2017 by region Statista Statista 2017 Retrieved 2018 12 10 Edwards Catherine 2017 07 18 Italy has EU s highest level of youth unemployment study shows The Local The Local Retrieved 2018 12 10 Edwards Catherine 2017 07 18 Italy has EU s highest level of youth unemployment study shows The Local The Local Retrieved 2018 12 10 a b Pastore Francesco 2012 11 01 Youth Unemployment in Italy at the Time of the New Great Depression PDF Friedrich Ebert Stiftung Library FES Retrieved 2018 12 10 a b Lange Marloes et al 2014 Youth Labour Market Integration Across Europe European Societies a b Squires Nick 2017 07 03 More than 80 000 Italians apply for just 30 bank jobs as economy remains in doldrums The Telegraph Retrieved 2018 12 10 Youth unemployment rate of active population aged 15 24 Eurostat European Commission Retrieved 2016 11 21 Youth long term unemployment rate 12 months or longer by sex and age Eurostat European Commission Retrieved 2016 11 21 Youth neither in employment nor in education and training NEET rate age group 15 24 Eurostat European Commission Retrieved 2016 11 21 FTPT employment based on a common definition OECD Stat Organisation for Economic Co Operation and Development Retrieved 2016 11 21 Involuntary part time employment as percentage of the total part time employment for young people by sex and age Eurostat European Commission Retrieved 2016 11 21 a b c Dolado Juan 2015 No Country for Young People Youth Labour Market Problems in Europe PDF VoxEU org CEPR Press Retrieved 2018 12 10 a b Pastore Francesco 2012 Youth Unemployment in Italy at the Time of the New Great Depression Friedrerich Ebert Stiftung Employment rates of recent graduates Statistics Explained ec europa eu Retrieved 2016 11 29 Unemployment rates of young people not in education and training by sex educational attainment level and years since completion of highest level of education Eurostat European Commission Retrieved 2016 11 28 Unemployment by sex age duration of unemployment and distinction registration benefits Eurostat European Commission Retrieved 2016 11 27 a b c d e Ferrera Maurizio 1996 02 01 The Southern Model of Welfare in Social Europe Journal of European Social Policy 6 1 17 37 doi 10 1177 095892879600600102 ISSN 0958 9287 S2CID 154404873 a b c Cinalli Manlio Giugni Marco 2013 07 01 New challenges for the welfare state The emergence of youth unemployment regimes in Europe International Journal of Social Welfare 22 3 290 299 doi 10 1111 ijsw 12016 hdl 2434 629674 ISSN 1468 2397 S2CID 55160552 OECD Indicators of Employment Protection OECD www oecd org Retrieved 2016 11 28 Munz Rainer 2014 The global race for talent Europe s migration challenge Retrieved December 7 2017 Se ne vanno giovani e laureati la nostra vita di genitori nell Italia dei figli lontani Corriere it 2017 09 25 Retrieved December 7 2017 Carli Andrea 2017 Oltre 250mila italiani emigrano all estero quasi quanti nel Dopoguerra Il Sole 24 ORE Retrieved December 7 2017 Lavoro il 61 dei giovani italiani pronto a emigrare per cercarlo all estero Il Fatto Quotidiano 2015 09 12 Retrieved December 7 2017 Like Saturn Italy is Devouring Its Children Youth Employment Decade 2018 01 03 Retrieved 2018 12 10 Ricucci Roberta 2017 The New Southern European Diaspora Youth Unemployment and Migration Lexington Books Italiani all estero nel 2016 emigrati in 124mila il 39 ha tra i 18 e i 34 anni Regno Unito meta preferita Il Fatto Quotidiano 2017 10 17 Retrieved December 7 2017 Italy s regional divide A tale of two economies The Economist 2015 05 16 Retrieved December 7 2017 Labour market statistics at regional level Eurostat Retrieved December 7 2017 Labour Market Eurostat Retrieved December 7 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Youth unemployment in Italy amp oldid 1197407409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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