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[PIKSI-L] unemployment

From Asep Abdurohman <asepa @ somewhere.in.the.world>
Date Wed, 5 Jun 2002 12:39:32 +0700

Dari http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,257139,00.html
"..and getting rejected for even simple bartending or hostess positions.."

di amrik aja nyari kerjaan mungkin mulai susah yach, sekarang pas tahun
ajaran baru, nambah pengangguran baru ... masih untung pengangguran
terselubung kayak saya hehehe, yg agak2 mudah dan masih tinggi pasarannya
mungkin kualifikasi yang jarang orang punya seperti IT, bahkan IT pun mulai
jadi kacangan nih 


-asp-

Young & Jobless
With youth unemployment at 12%, this year's graduates have to be flexible
about their futures


Monday, Jun. 10, 2002
With two weeks to go before graduation ceremonies at the University of
Washington, even a rare sunny afternoon in Seattle isn't enough to lighten
Julia Kusian's mood. Kusian is coming to realize that a B.A. in psychology
won't get her very far in this job market. While other students are playing
Frisbee or napping on the lawn, Kusian, 21, has been handing out resumes all
over town and getting rejected for even simple bartending or hostess
positions, which she needs to tide her over while she prepares to apply to
grad schools. "If I thought I could get a good job now with a decent
salary," she says, "I wouldn't be going through all this."

Only two years ago, even liberal-arts majors like Kusian could expect
multiple job offers from dotcoms and maybe even a signing bonus. Not now.
College seniors are facing the worst employment market in a decade, often
competing for entry-level jobs against laid-off workers with M.B.A.s and
years of experience. This year's graduates were playing Little League the
last time we had a recession. They picked their majors during the Internet
bubble and continue to do most of their job searching online. But they are
often finding that not even impressive diplomas and face-to-face networking
can coax a job out of a sluggish economy.

 

Although first-time jobless claims fell slightly last month, economists are
expecting that April's 6% unemployment rate  the highest in nearly eight
years  will climb to 6.5% as 1.2 million new job seekers come streaming
through their college gates and a million or so high school graduates start
looking for full-time jobs. Since October, the unemployment rate has been
hovering around 12% for workers ages 16 to 24, who are usually the first to
be laid off. Diane Miller, 22, a zoology major who graduated in April from
the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, is looking for work in marine
biology but observes wistfully, "A lot of people who were going to help me
get a job are now having to worry about their own jobs."

Even mechanical-engineering major Elisabeth Rareshide, 22, who graduated
last month with an A average from Rice University in Houston, had to
scramble to find work. She set out looking for a job in renewable energy but
broadened her search almost immediately  and by March had smiled and
chatted her way through 30 on-campus interviews and sent out resumes to 50
other companies. "I quickly realized I was not going to get my dream job,
and would be lucky to get a job at all," she says. The New Orleans native
left last week for a six-month internship in South America to help design
oil facilities for TECNA-Ecuador.

With any luck, the job market will be showing signs of life by the time
Rareshide returns. But experts say it could take as long as 18 months before
many young adults find their place in today's crawling-out-of-a-hole economy
 which is being compared with the "jobless recovery" that followed the
1990-91 recession. Help could be on the way: the current rise in
productivity and corporate profits should eventually spur hiring. But for
now, productivity is surging because companies are squeezing more work out
of fewer people, discouraging news for young adults stuck in the back of the
hiring line.

Why are the young being hit so hard? Think of the job market as a big
stepladder with layoffs forcing many workers to slip down a rung, leaving
few vacancies at the bottom for new job seekers. Boomers are refusing to
budge (i.e., retire) at a time when their kids  also members of an
unusually large generation  are clamoring to climb aboard. At Parsons
Brinckerhoff, a major engineering firm based in New York City, the turnover
rate has been cut in half since last year, to less than 7%. "We're seeing
the pig in the python here," says Parsons executive vice president John Ryan
of the lingering boomers. While they are clogging up the system, young
engineering grads  who remain in short supply  are getting fewer job
offers and smaller salary increases.



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Dihasilkan pada Thu Sep 22 18:42:10 2005 | menggunakan mhonarc 2.6.10