Tuesday, February 28, 2012

The Economist: Europe's Labor Markets Stacked Aginst The Young

In this week's issue The Economist notes that youth unemployment may, in the long run, prove to be the worst of Europe's many problems 

OF ALL the euro zone’s many problems, youth unemployment is perhaps the most distressing. Joblessness among young workers is around 30% in Portugal and nearly 50% in Spain. Above-average unemployment is the norm for young people, even in more liberal markets like America’s. But Spain’s youth unemployment rate jumped by nearly 20 percentage points between 2007 and 2009, compared with a rise of seven points in America. Labour-market regulations take much of the blame: while hard-to-fire older workers luxuriate on permanent contracts, the young are typically hired temporarily and are easier to sack.

Read the whole thing!

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