Jen Dalitz
SIGN UP TO RECEIVE NEWS & UPDATES DIRECT TO YOUR INBOX
SheEO_mentoring

Latest Posts

  1. Women in Business, Supporting Women's Economic Empowerment - June 6th - Register now Jen Dalitz 24-May-2012
  2. Congratulations to Nikki White at The Heart Of, winner of Suncorp's Helping Hand competition Jen Dalitz 24-May-2012
  3. Melinda Gates says it's time to put contraception back on the agenda. Your thoughts? Jen Dalitz 24-May-2012
  4. Gender Discrimination: speak out, suffer in silence or just move on? Jen Dalitz 24-May-2012
  5. 7 steps to making money from LinkedIn (and other social media) and MAX your return on investment Jen Dalitz 04-May-2012
  6. Competition, all-girl groups and the case for single-sex schooling Jen Dalitz 04-May-2012
  7. 5 tips (and loads of links) to help you score a seat at the table as Women on Government Boards hits record high of 35.7 per cent Jen Dalitz 26-Apr-2012

Fruit at Work


Why Teens Aren't Finding Jobs, and Why Employers Are Paying the Price

Friday, January 16, 2009

Despite the US bent, this Knowledge at Wharton article is thought provoking. As recently as 1990, nearly 70% of newspaper carriers in the U.S. were teens. But that number dropped to 18% in 2004, and more declines are likely. Although reasons for teens being edged out of this formerly youth-dominated profession are specific to the newspaper industry, the end of the boyhood (or girlhood) paper route reflects a dramatic but little-noticed trend: Teen unemployment has hit historic lows in the last three years. Experts in the field say employers who want to ensure a quality workforce down the line should sit up and take notice.


"It's a baffling problem. The economy is humming along, and employers are almost desperate for people they can hire and train. Contrast that with the lowest teen market penetration in 50 years. Somewhere the connection point is not being made," says Ken Smith, president and CEO of Jobs for America's Graduates, an Alexandria, Va.-based non-profit that helps more than 40,000 youth each year transition from school to work.

According to data gathered for the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 37% of teens nationwide worked in the summer of 2006 -- nearly 11% fewer than were working in 1989, the peak of a nation-wide economic boom.  

Click here to read the full article