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A Jobless Generation

by Melissa Rose on August 16, 2010

As a kid, I can remember my grandmother telling me stories of how people coped through the Great Depression.  I now suspect that living through that era altered her life path mentally. Of course it all seemed foreign to me and the thought of experiencing anything remotely like it in my lifetime appeared more fictional than possible.  After all, we’ve prospered as a nation; women’s lib had prevailed and technology was progressing.  I was young and I had naive notions that my life would have fewer struggles than generations before me.

My generation, Gen X, has been rather removed from an extreme economic downturn like the one we are experiencing now.  We’re older, in the midst of our careers and many of us are raising our own families.  This is new to us and many don’t even know what to make of it.

Unemployment plays a large role, not just in terms of financial survival, but the havoc it wreaks on the psyche of those unable to land a job or those who are unemployed.

It’s easy for me to say, as a parent, that in the year 2018 when my own daughter embarks on a career things will be better.  But according to Don Peck in the Atlantic, 10 million new jobs would need to be created just to bring the unemployment rate down to 5 percent today.  “Even if the economy were to immediately begin producing 600,000 jobs a month—more than double the pace of the mid-to-late 1990s, when job growth was strong—it would take roughly two years to dig ourselves out of the hole we’re in.”  Peck writes.

Youth unemployment today remains high.  It’s estimated that only 17 out of 100 teens are gainfully employed.  Employment means far more than a earning a paycheck and having pocket cash.  According to experts, the state of the economy and the time line when young people enter the workforce have lasting impacts, positive or negative, on professional mobility and attainment.  A college degree is no longer an employment guarantee.

Many of us already know that the Gen Y generation (our kids) are different than generations before.  They tend to be more micro-managed in their activities and need constant direction to complete tasks.  They also tend to be less entrepreneurial than their forefathers.  Couple this with gaining necessary skills later in life will have a profound affect not only in their careers, but in their personal lives as well.  Those with a sense of self-entitlement will have the rudest awakening when reality sets in.

Jobs don’t just appear out of thin air.  They’re created by existing companies and new firms.  They’re created through the innovation of new products and through people who have learned to think outside of the box, can take a risk and start something new.  Those who wait for opportunity to land at their doorstep will likely find an empty stoop.

Melissa

Biz in a Boxx

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

Jason Miller August 16, 2010 at 12:30 pm

I remember when I graduated college in 1990 it took me a year and a half of working temp jobs till I found a regular full time job. And that was a mild recession compared to this one. Without fundamental economic and trade reform back to pre-Reagan policies, the US will remain gutted of its once supreme manufacturing base. If people can’t find jobs or create their own businesses, then we may be sinking into a modern day depression. I wish my grandparents were still around so I could ask them more about what they did to survive it the last time.

Karyn Climans August 16, 2010 at 1:25 pm

Fortunately my 19 year old son has a job this summer – in fact, he has two! I’m worried about my 17 year old though. High school students looking for summer jobs are finding it tougher than ever. When I was young, I took it for granted that I would find a summer job throughout high school. The work I did gave me some incredible experience (I worked as a day camp counsellor) and I’m certain these positions on my resume were a large part of the reason I was accepted in to Teacher’s College after graduating from University.
The current economic situation is scary and the economy isn’t showing any signs of recovery.

Melissa Rose August 16, 2010 at 1:51 pm

Add education reform to the mix; the ills of today will present themselves tomorrow. There will be generations of kids ill-prepared to sop up a mess that’s been brewing for quite some time.

Melissa Rose August 16, 2010 at 2:04 pm

The Conference Board, Corporate Voices for Working Families, the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, and the Society for Human Resource Management conducted a study about workforce preparedness amongst high school through four-year college graduates. It shows the discrepancy between skills obtained (or not obtained) versus what employers are seeking. http://www.p21.org/documents/FINAL_REPORT_PDF09-29-06.pdf

Karyn, you’re right about how we took those summer jobs for granted, so congrats to your son who has been able to land two of them.

Bella August 17, 2010 at 2:52 pm

Now is the time! Create your own business. Take risks, and go full steam ahead. Being a business owner isn’t always the steadiest of waters – but they are the most warm :) Build your business. Build people under you. Put yourself on the top of the pyramid. We are in the USA. We can re invent ourselves. Figure out your passion and make it your business. If you need help – grab a biz in the boxx. I know many adults who have used it ;)

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