sanjunien wrote:
Jobwise, it was relatively easy to find employment compared to nowadays and one could change jobs when you wanted almost - my lad who is now 25 managed to find work after a few months in England (he applied for posts anywhere in europe) with two Masters with honours from La Sorbonne in his pocket and he realises how lucky he is to have a relatively stable employment - he knows he will probably be on the scrapheap when he hits 40 ish so is preparing for his working future - we live in an uncertain and unstable world and I fear for the youth of today and even more for the next generation
I don't know if they are 'doomed' to paraphrase the famous undertaker or if solutions can be found but it's hard to be optimistic nowadays - apologies if I sound negative but that's the way I believe many people of my age feel...
as I said, good luck to anyone with possible solutions and they will have my total support
We’ll leave the music behind now till it becomes relevant again in this thread.
A lot of graduates have gone through and are going through what your son went through. Although credit to your son he does tend to have a lot more higher education qualifications than the average long term unemployed graduate. I’m glad he’s found something to do.
I think the most demoralising thing for university graduates is getting turned down for a relatively easy job like stacking shelves at a supermarket. One of the battlefront campaigners went for a job at ASDA and was told she was unsuitable – like who are ASDA to judge whose suitable and unsuitable to9 stack their shelves? If anyone’s a job snob these days then its employers who turn down well educated people for a menial job. You’d think that the biggest supermarkets in this country would be more than happy to provide employment for our graduates until they find employment in their preferred field. But then again supermarkets have been getting people on the cheap through government programmes that give the unemployed a harsh choice between working for their benefits or not getting any benefits at all. The unemployed in some cases are getting paid under £2 an hour to stack shelves. It’s just a terrible situation for many at the moment but not for everyone.
When tacking youth unemployment I think that the focus is all on the wrong things. Rather than try and look for the solution we end up focusing on the negative end of things. Lobbying the government to stop taking advantage of a bad situation isn’t going to solve anything – they’ve made a decision and there likely to stick with it good or bad.
Likewise protesting at firms who take advantage of a bad situation isn’t going to solve anything. If anything we could end up losing these firms abroad which could make this country much worse off.
Didn’t the unions (as much as I support the unions) back in the day scare many companies to distant shores?
Look at what we’re left with..