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2_ NASE NOVINE - IZBOR - APRIL 20,1983 WfftOTf'f"t$v ''? ""£"' -- - 7 ST - --.#„-i %"# Г"7"? " '??лЛ.Ц-- ч .? t—7 —" By Wanda Kojich Young Canadians face an uncertain future. Enormous pitfalls endanger their fervent hopes and threaten their legitimate aspirations. Hundreds of thousands of young men and women are without work. Many of them have been reduced to the lowest levels of human existence, deprived of the most elementary needs: adequate food, shelter and clothing. Over 600,000 young Canadians under 25 years of age are unemployed. This does not include thousands of discouraged young workers who have given up hope of ever finding a Job. More than 200,000 additional young Canadians will swell their ranks when high school and university students begin their desperate search for jobs. A young lawyer, with a law degree and a B.A. in history and political science, sent 220 (two hundred and twenty) resumes to law firms and legal departments, hoping to find a job. He received twelve replies and only three interviews were granted. He did not get a job. A young woman, completing her Bache-lor of Commerce degree this year, had fourteen dead-en- d job interviews. Her last encounter was for a position as a financial analyst. She did not get a job. A fourth-yea- r civil engineering student filled out eleven job applications. Not one of them resulted in a firm promise of a Job. Young Canadians are understandably bewildered. They find It difficult to comprehend the vast social and economic complexities that merge to deprive them of the bright future they planned and worked for. Unemployment devastates young peop le. It denies them of the dignity and the creativity that originates in productive activity. Unemployment reduces the human being to a fragment of a man or a woman. Frightening statistics on suicide con-fir- n the dreams and hopes deflowered, the terrible waste of human life when young people are deprived of confidence and self esteem, when a society compels them to abandon all hope for the future. The suicide rate among the 15-to- 19 year olds has Increased by over 400 per cent (four hundred per cent) in the past fifteen years. For every teen-ag- e suicide at least 50 other young people tried unsuccessfully to destroy themselves. Canadian Indians, with the highest unemployment rate in the country, are reported to have the highest suicide rate in the world. The rate of self-inflict- ed violence appears to vary directly with tha rate of unemployment. The Canadian Federation of Students recently presented a report to the federal Employment Minister Lloyd Axworthy on the unemployment crisis among ybung people. The minister's response was typically negative, claiming that the fede-ral government has already reached the limit of job creation. Axworthy's message was quite clear. The government is not concerned about young people. Don't expect the situation to improve. Unemployment will continue to escalate. There will be no major public works to absorb the growing number of uneployed workers and to provide adequa-te student employment. Bank of Canada Governor Gerald Bouey recently warned the federal government not to stimulate the economy. His mesage was equally clear. Fight Inflation with unemployment. Impose still greater hardships on the poor. Deny jobs to enough young Canadians and inflation will be reduced to lower, more acceptable levels. The trade-of- f recommended by Gerald Bouey is clearly unacceptable to young Canadians. There are better, less costly alternatives. Young Canadians represent only 25 per cent of the total labour force. Yet they account for almost 50 per cent of the unemployed. The jobless rate for those In the 1 5 to 24 age group was 19.6 per cent in mid-198- 2. About one third of those receiving unem-ployment benefits are young people under 24 year of age. Regional economic disparities account for the uneven rates of unemployment across the country. The Conference Board of Canada predicts almost 20 per cent unemployment in Newfoundland for 1983. The young people of this province are especially hard hit, with a jobless rate of almost 45 per cent. The need of alternative policies emeres. from these grim statistics. Something obviously has to be done to alleviate the intense suffering of Canada's 2,000,000 unemployed workers and their families. Policies that fight inflation with unem-ployment should be abandoned. They impose the burden of the economic crisis on the poorest segment of Canada's population. The main thrust of Canada's economic policies should now be directed toward positive stimulation to promote a sustai-nable recovery and to provide for young Canadians a bright new future, free of despair and devastating uncertainty.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Nase Novine, June 08, 1983 |
Language | sr; hr |
Subject | Yugoslavia -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Yugoslavia; Yugoslavian Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1983-04-20 |
Type | application/pdf |
Format | text |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | nanod2000199 |
Description
Title | 000211 |
OCR text | 2_ NASE NOVINE - IZBOR - APRIL 20,1983 WfftOTf'f"t$v ''? ""£"' -- - 7 ST - --.#„-i %"# Г"7"? " '??лЛ.Ц-- ч .? t—7 —" By Wanda Kojich Young Canadians face an uncertain future. Enormous pitfalls endanger their fervent hopes and threaten their legitimate aspirations. Hundreds of thousands of young men and women are without work. Many of them have been reduced to the lowest levels of human existence, deprived of the most elementary needs: adequate food, shelter and clothing. Over 600,000 young Canadians under 25 years of age are unemployed. This does not include thousands of discouraged young workers who have given up hope of ever finding a Job. More than 200,000 additional young Canadians will swell their ranks when high school and university students begin their desperate search for jobs. A young lawyer, with a law degree and a B.A. in history and political science, sent 220 (two hundred and twenty) resumes to law firms and legal departments, hoping to find a job. He received twelve replies and only three interviews were granted. He did not get a job. A young woman, completing her Bache-lor of Commerce degree this year, had fourteen dead-en- d job interviews. Her last encounter was for a position as a financial analyst. She did not get a job. A fourth-yea- r civil engineering student filled out eleven job applications. Not one of them resulted in a firm promise of a Job. Young Canadians are understandably bewildered. They find It difficult to comprehend the vast social and economic complexities that merge to deprive them of the bright future they planned and worked for. Unemployment devastates young peop le. It denies them of the dignity and the creativity that originates in productive activity. Unemployment reduces the human being to a fragment of a man or a woman. Frightening statistics on suicide con-fir- n the dreams and hopes deflowered, the terrible waste of human life when young people are deprived of confidence and self esteem, when a society compels them to abandon all hope for the future. The suicide rate among the 15-to- 19 year olds has Increased by over 400 per cent (four hundred per cent) in the past fifteen years. For every teen-ag- e suicide at least 50 other young people tried unsuccessfully to destroy themselves. Canadian Indians, with the highest unemployment rate in the country, are reported to have the highest suicide rate in the world. The rate of self-inflict- ed violence appears to vary directly with tha rate of unemployment. The Canadian Federation of Students recently presented a report to the federal Employment Minister Lloyd Axworthy on the unemployment crisis among ybung people. The minister's response was typically negative, claiming that the fede-ral government has already reached the limit of job creation. Axworthy's message was quite clear. The government is not concerned about young people. Don't expect the situation to improve. Unemployment will continue to escalate. There will be no major public works to absorb the growing number of uneployed workers and to provide adequa-te student employment. Bank of Canada Governor Gerald Bouey recently warned the federal government not to stimulate the economy. His mesage was equally clear. Fight Inflation with unemployment. Impose still greater hardships on the poor. Deny jobs to enough young Canadians and inflation will be reduced to lower, more acceptable levels. The trade-of- f recommended by Gerald Bouey is clearly unacceptable to young Canadians. There are better, less costly alternatives. Young Canadians represent only 25 per cent of the total labour force. Yet they account for almost 50 per cent of the unemployed. The jobless rate for those In the 1 5 to 24 age group was 19.6 per cent in mid-198- 2. About one third of those receiving unem-ployment benefits are young people under 24 year of age. Regional economic disparities account for the uneven rates of unemployment across the country. The Conference Board of Canada predicts almost 20 per cent unemployment in Newfoundland for 1983. The young people of this province are especially hard hit, with a jobless rate of almost 45 per cent. The need of alternative policies emeres. from these grim statistics. Something obviously has to be done to alleviate the intense suffering of Canada's 2,000,000 unemployed workers and their families. Policies that fight inflation with unem-ployment should be abandoned. They impose the burden of the economic crisis on the poorest segment of Canada's population. The main thrust of Canada's economic policies should now be directed toward positive stimulation to promote a sustai-nable recovery and to provide for young Canadians a bright new future, free of despair and devastating uncertainty. |
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