European Commission, MEMO, Brussels, 8 July 2014:
What is the current situation?
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5.2 million young people were unemployed in the EU-28 area in May 2014.
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This represents an unemployment rate of 22.2% (23.3% in the euro area). More than one in five young Europeans on the labour market cannot find a job; in Greece and Spain it is one in two.
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7.5 million young Europeans between 15 and 24 are not employed, not in education and not in training (NEETs).
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In the last four years, the overall employment rates for young people fell three times as much as for adults.
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The gap between the countries with the highest and the lowest jobless rates for young people remains extremely high. There is a gap of nearly 50 percentage points between the Member State with the lowest rate of youth unemployment (Germany at 7.8% in May 2014) and with the Member State with the highest rate, Greece (57.7% in March 2014). Greece is followed by Spain (54%), Croatia (48.7%), Italy (43%), Cyprus (37.3%), and Portugal (34.8%).
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The potential of job mobility to help tackle youth unemployment could be further developed: the workforce in employment in the EU is around 216.1 million persons of which only 7.5 million (3.1%) are working in another Member State. EU surveys show that young people are the group most likely to be mobile.
The situation is clearly
unacceptable: this is why the Commission has been working with Member
States to tackle youth unemployment.
What is the EU doing?.................................http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-14-466_en.htm?locale=en
8/7/14
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