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Explore the pressing issue of youth unemployment in the UNECE region, with insights on causes, policy actions, and future strategies for enhancing youth development and employment prospects. Addressing structural factors through education and training programs is crucial. Learn about the region's efforts to integrate disadvantaged youth and empower them for a dynamic and green economy.
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Regional Perspective on Youth and Development in the UNECE • Mr. SvenAlkalaj • United Nations Under-Secretary-General • Executive Secretary • Economic Commission for Europe • UnitedNations, New York • July 10, 2012
The future of the region’s youth: unemployment is the most immediate problem • The region’s youth unemployment rate is approximately 20%, and almost 50% in Greece and Spain. • Youth unemployment is 2 to 2.5 times higher than overall unemployment throughout the business cycle. • Highest in the world except for the Middle East and North Africa. 1/2 Regional youth unemployment
The future of the region’s youth: unemployment is the most immediate problem • Higher for men in the European advanced economies and higher for women in the transition economies. • The cause is a combination of both cyclical and structural factors, and the solution must address both. • 2/2 Regional youth unemployment
Enhancing the future of the region’s youth: reducing unemployment Policy actions needed to reduce unemployment • Additional regionally coordinated fiscal stimulus is the only tool for significantly lowering unemployment over the next year or two. • Structural unemployment can be lowered over the medium term with improved education and training programs and active labor market policies. • The European Union’s New Skills for New Jobs Initiative is a best practice. 1/2
Enhancing the future of the region’s youth: reducing unemployment Policy actions needed to reduce unemployment • However, austerity programs are resulting in large cuts to programs developing human capital and will lower future growth. • Transition economies’ school systems and training programs have yet to fully adapt to the needs of a market economy. • Scandinavian flexicurity programs appear reasonably successful in providing income support for workers while still keeping labor markets flexible. • Many previously tried policies to enhance youth employment (lower minimum wages, short-term contracts, etc.) usually did not work. • 2/2
Majority Roma 100 The region needs to better integrate the youth from disadvantaged groups into the educational system and labor markets 90 80 70 60 Per cent 50 40 Proportion of young men (25-34) with at least upper secondary education, in mid-2000s 30 20 10 0 Bulgaria Hungary Romania
Educating the youth for the future • More students completing the secondary and tertiary levels throughout the region. • Programs are needed to counteract gender stereotyping regarding educational and occupational choices. • Family planning and child care facilities to reduce the economic costs of motherhood. 1/2 The region desires to create innovative, dynamic and green economies, which requires
Educating the youth for the future The region desires to create innovative, dynamic and green economies, which requires • Universal access to primary school for both boys and girls; additional primary school teachers are needed in some of the transition economies. • Linking industry with universities and research centers and creating an enabling environment for young researchers. • Educational systems should provide a broad curriculum that fully addresses mankind’s environmental, social and economic challenges. • 2/2
Additional challenges facing the region’s youth • Health • Malnutrition:10% of the children in the transition economies are moderately or severely stunted. • HIV-Aids: significant progress but still a major problem in eastern Europe. • Traffic deaths: very high in east Europe. • Ageing • Europe has the lowest birth rates and the oldest populations of any world region: young people will have to pay the bill. • 1/2
Additional challenges facing the region’s youth • Peace and Security • Europe has a history of conflicts; south-east Europe in the 1990s. • European integration efforts were not established solely for economic purposes, but also for advancing peace and cooperation. • 2/2
Thank you! • For more information www.unece.org