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Bangladesh’s youth unemployment rate 10.6%: ILO

UNB . Dhaka
12 Aug 2022 00:00:00 | Update: 12 Aug 2022 00:22:04
Bangladesh’s youth unemployment rate 10.6%: ILO
The pandemic has hurt young people more than any other age group – Collected Photo

In Bangladesh, the youth unemployment rate currently stands at 10.6%, more than twice the overall national unemployment rate of 4.2 percent, said the International Labour Organization (ILO) on Thursday.

Youth unemployment increased significantly during the Covid-19 Pandemic, it said. ILO is supporting the Government of Bangladesh in boosting employment for young people through skills training and industrial apprenticeships, as well as promoting entrepreneurship and skilled labour migration.

‘’Skilled youth is the key to Bangladesh’s future,” said Director for ILO Country Office, Bangladesh, Tuomo Poutiainen. Poutiainen said ILO is proud to partner with the government of Bangladesh to build young people’s skills and employability.

Recovery in youth employment is still lagging, according to a new report by the IILO published on the eve of International Youth Day that falls on August 12 every year.

The report confirms that the COVID-19 pandemic has hurt young people more than any other age group.

The Global Employment Trends for Youth 2022 report finds that the pandemic has exacerbated the numerous labour market challenges facing those aged between 15 and 24 years, who have experienced a much higher percentage loss in employment than adults since early 2020.

The total global number of unemployed youths is estimated to reach 73 million in 2022, a slight improvement from 2021 (75 million) but still six million above the pre-pandemic level of 2019, the report says.

The share of youth not in employment, education or training (NEET) in 2020 – the latest year for which a global estimate is available – rose to 23.3 per cent, an increase of 1.5 percentage points from the previous year and a level not seen in at least 15 years.

This group of young people is at particular risk of seeing their labour market opportunities and outcomes deteriorate also over the longer-term as “scarring” effects take hold.

Young women are worse off than young men, exhibiting a much lower employment-to-population ratio (EPR).

In 2022, 27.4 per cent of young women globally are projected to be in employment, compared to 40.3 per cent of young men.

This means that young men are almost 1.5 times more likely than young women to be employed.

The gender gap, which has shown little sign of closing over the past two decades, is largest in lower-middle-income countries, at 17.3 percentage points, and smallest in high-income countries, at 2.3 percentage points.

Regional Differences

The recovery in youth unemployment is projected to diverge between low- and middle-income countries on the one hand and high-income countries on the other.

High‑income countries are the only ones expected to achieve youth unemployment rates close to those of 2019 by the end of 2022, while in the other country income groups, the rates are projected to remain more than 1 percentage point above their pre-crisis values, says the report.

In Europe and Central Asia (ECA) the unemployment rate of young people is projected to be 1.5 percentage points higher than the world average in 2022 – 16.4 per cent versus 14.9 per cent, respectively.

There has been substantial progress in reducing youth unemployment – for both women and men – but the actual and potential shocks of the war in Ukraine are highly likely to affect the results.

The unemployment rate of young people in the Asia and Pacific region is projected to reach 14.9 per cent in 2022, the same as the global average, although there are important divergences between subregions and countries.

In Latin American countries the youth unemployment rate is still worrying, projected at 20.5 per cent in 2022.

Historically, young women’s unemployment rates have been higher than young men’s, but the crisis exacerbated this trend.

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