Friday, 23 September 2016

Youth unemployment hotspots persist in regional and rural Australia, data shows

Extract from ABC News

AM
Posted 15 Mar 2016, 8:48am



Young people are struggling to find work across Australia, but none more so than those living in outback Queensland, new analysis of jobless data shows.

Key points:

  • Youth unemployment rate reached 28pc in outback Queensland this year
  • Shift towards "knowledge industries" is seeing a reduction in the number of entry-level jobs for young people
  • School leavers feel frustrated they can not get a foot in the door
The Brotherhood of St Laurence has mapped jobless hotspots around Australia.
It found the youth unemployment rate in outback Queensland reached 28 per cent at the beginning of the year — the worst in the country.
The rate was nearly 23 per cent in the New South Wales' Hunter Valley, excluding Newcastle, and just over 20 per cent in Wide Bay and Cairns on the Queensland coast.
Cairns teenager Ricco Cortez finished school at the end of last year and said he on average applied for two retail jobs a day.
"Most jobs require a few years of experience," he said.
"You've just finished school and you're just looking to get your foot in the door."
Mr Cortez said he scanned internet job sites and personally visited stores to ask about work, but without luck.
He said he found applying for many jobs and not getting a response frustrating.

Shift towards 'knowledge industries' hurting job chances

The Brotherhood of St Laurence executive director Tony Nicholson said he was concerned about the overall youth unemployment picture in Australia.

"Youth unemployment remains stubbornly high," he said.
"It's marginally down from the peak of two years ago when it was at 14 per cent, but nationally we now see youth unemployment still at a little over 12 per cent."
He noted that nationally there were fewer entry-level jobs for young people, as the economy shifted to focus more on services such as education and "knowledge industries" including information technology and health care.
For young Australians in regional areas, a cooling of the mining industry has hurt job prospects.
"It's much harder for younger people to get into work in those areas," Mr Nicholson said.

Work placement allows employers to 'try before they buy'

In far north Queensland, where high youth unemployment persists, a company called Vocational Partnership Group has arranged unpaid work experience for students and school-leavers for the past 17 years.
Chief executive officer Maryanne Tranter suggested too much attention was being paid to school results and not enough to gaining "real world" experience.
"It gives an opportunity for an employer to try before they buy," she said of the work experience program. Ms Tranter said that students who did a work placement were more employable. "They suddenly are a far more attractive package than a fortnight ago where they have a resume with no previous work history."

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