Skip to content

The Monitor Progressive news, views and ideas

Sitting on the Sidelines: Young People Miss Out on the Recovery

December 15, 2011

1-minute read

As is well known, the youth unemployment rate remains high, and well above average. It stood at 14.1% in November or more than double the unemployment rate of 6.3%  for persons aged 25 to 54, and 6.2% for those aged 55 and over.

What is a little bit more surprising is that the youth unemployment rate, while down from the recession peak of over 15%,  has risen over the past year - up by 0.5 percentage points - while it has fallen - by 0.3% percentage points- for those aged 25 and over.

Young people were hard hit by the recession, and have been mainly sitting on the sidelines during the recovery.

In fact, youth now make up almost one in three (29.1%) of Canada's 1.4 million unemployed , but account for only one in seven (14.2%) of Canada's employed work force.

What is even more striking than high youth unemployment is the very large proportion of young people who have given up looking for work, and are, therefore, not counted as unemployed.

Between November 2008, just after the recession began, and November, 2011, the youth unemployment rate rose from 11.9% to 13.5%. Meanwhile the participation rate of young workers fell quite dramatically, from 65.5% to 61.7%. (These data from CANSIM Table 282-0001 are not seasonally adjusted.)

The decline in the youth participation rate has been somewhat more marked among men (66.5% to 61.7%) than among women (64.5% to 61.6%.)

As a result of rising unemployment and more young workers dropping out of the labour force, the employment rate for youth - that is, the proportion holding a job, any job - fell from 57.7% in November, 2008 to just 53.4% in November, 2011. (The fall was from 57.5% to 52.4% for men, and from 57.9% to 54.4% for women.)

And, for those young people still working, the proportion in part-time jobs has risen from 49.6% to 50.8%.

It is interesting that the fall in the employment rate for youth has been heavily concentrated among students. Between November, 2008 and November, 2011, the employment rate of young people who were students (full or part time) fell from 44.4% to 39.2%, much more than for non students whose employment rate slipped from 77.9% to 77.2%. No doubt that translates into much increased levels of student debt.

Canada does not have the sky high youth unemployment rates of some European countries. But young people are the major victims of Canada's recession and tepid (perhaps now stalled) recovery. Many young people are still in school, but most still want and need part-time and seasonal jobs, and those leaving the educational system definitely want and need full-time decent jobs related to their field of  study.

The employment situation of young people should be a much more prominent part of the discussion over our economic and labour market policies.

Topics addressed in this article

Related Articles

Canada’s fight against inflation: Bank of Canada could induce a recession

History tells us that the Bank of Canada has a 0% success rate in fighting inflation by quickly raising interest rates. If a pilot told me that they’d only ever attempted a particular landing three times in the past 60 years with a 0% success rate, that’s not a plane I’d want to be on. Unfortunately, that looks likes the plane all Canadians are on now.

Non-viable businesses need an"off-ramp"

Throughout the pandemic, many small- and medium-sized businesses have weathered the storm, thanks to federal government help. In his deputation to Canada's federal Industry Committee, David Macdonald says it's time to give those businesses an "off-ramp".

Truth bomb: Corporate sector winning the economic recovery lottery; workers falling behind

This isn’t a workers’ wage-led recovery; in fact, inflation is eating into workers’ wages, diminishing their ability to recover from the pandemic recession. Corporate profits are capturing more economic growth than in any previous recession recovery period over the past 50 years.