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Foreword
Young women and men are the worlds greatest asset for the present
and future, but they also represent a group with serious vulnerabilities.
In recent years increasing global unemployment has hit young people
hard and todays youth are faced with high levels of economic and
social uncertainty. Compared to adults, the youth of today are more
than three times as likely to be unemployed. All too often, their full
potential is not realized because they do not have access to decent
and productive work.
The link between youth unemployment and social exclusion has been clearly
established; an inability to find a job creates a sense of vulnerability,
uselessness and idleness among young people and can heighten the attraction
of engaging in illegal activities. For many young people today, being
without work means being without a chance to work themselves out of
poverty. In addition, an individuals previous unemployment experience
has been proven to have implications for future employment chances.
Yet open unemployment is only part of the challenge; even where young
people are working, conditions of work may be poor. In both industrialized
and developing economies, young people are more likely to have intermittent
(temporary, part-time, casual) work and insecure arrangements, oftentimes
in the informal economy with limited labour protection.
Giving people a chance to achieve decent employment early in their
work-life would help to avoid the development of the vicious circle
of unemployment, poor working conditions, poverty and frustration which,
in turn, damages the future perspectives of whole economies. Since its
inception in 1919, the ILO has aimed to improve the employment and working
conditions of young people. Today, backed by a newfound sense of urgency
at the global level in finding solutions to the employment difficulties
of young people, the ILO is strengthening its commitment to facilitate,
coordinate and provide technical guidance for an integrated programme
of work on youth employment. A central feature of this work is the leading
role of the social partners in the promotion of decent work and the
eradication of poverty.
On the global level, the ILO acts as the Secretariat for the UN Secretary-Generals
Youth Employment Network (YEN), created in the framework of the Millennium
Declaration where Heads of State and Government resolved to develop
and implement strategies that give young people everywhere a real chance
to find decent and productive work. Youth employment is both an
integral part of the Millennium Declaration and a key contribution to
meeting other Millennium Goals, including those relating to poverty
reduction. This report contributes to ILO efforts by defining the problems
that youth face in todays labour markets and providing an analysis
of the current labour market trends of young people. It incorporates
the most recent information available in order to shed light on the
possible factors contributing to the increasing difficulties todays
youth face when trying to enter the labour force. The information provided
here offers a concise picture of where decent work opportunities for
young people are most needed around the world.
This report was prepared for International Youth Day, 12 August 2004.