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Young Swedes struggle with woeful job market

Young Swedes struggle with woeful job market

With Sweden's youth unemployment statistics consistently high and more young Swedes forced to seek greener pastures in Norway, AFP's Soren Billing looks into the Swedish model and how it's leaving young Swedes jobless.

Published: 19 Nov 2012 08:34 CET



When Adam Lundborg, a 25 year-old business graduate, began handing out flyers on a busy shopping street in central Stockholm this summer, he was selling a product he knew better than most: himself.

The leaflets featured a short presentation of Lundborg and the type of jobs he was looking for: "any challenges you throw my way."

"I graduated from university with top grades, but when I entered the job market it was like hitting a brick wall," he said.

On his second day of job hunting, Lundborg was offered a job by a company that had read about his plight in a newspaper. But the opening, described in the media as a "dream job", turned out to be a commission-based telemarketing position.

He ended up resigning, choosing instead to spend his time calling chief executives at companies he'd like to work for, hoping to get a chance to introduce himself.

Lundborg is victim of Sweden's persistently high youth unemployment, a hot-button issue in a country that prides itself on egalitarian policies, and that has weathered the financial crisis better than most.

Although Sweden's export-driven economy is beginning to feel the effects of Europe's economic woes, it has posted strong growth since making a quick recovery from the 2008 recession. It also has a low level of government debt.

But youth unemployment has remained above the European average, reaching a seasonally adjusted 23.0 percent in October, compared to 7.7 percent for the population as a whole, according to Statistics Sweden.

Last year, Swedes aged 15 to 24 were more than four times more likely to be without work than the rest of the workforce, the highest ratio in Europe according to Eurostat.

Even during the boom years before the crisis, Sweden's youth unemployment hovered around 25 percent.

Last month one town, Söderhamn, went so far as to subsidize people between 18 and 28 to go look for work in Norway.

Swedish employers place the blame squarely on the employment protection laws and high entry level wages championed by the country's powerful unions.

"The barriers to entry to the job market are especially high in Sweden, leaving many young people on the sidelines," said Malin Sahlen, an economist at the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise, who on Tuesday released a book on the subject.

In her book, Sahlen argues that the high cost of firing workers means employers are reluctant to hire people with little, or little known, experience, making it tougher for young people and immigrants to gain a foothold in the job market.

They also bear the brunt of any job cuts in a downturn due to strictly enforced "last in, first out" selection criteria during redundancies.

Moreover, the high level of pay for entry level jobs -- in Sweden set by collective bargaining, as opposed to a statutory minimum wage -- give companies little incentive to choose young people over more experienced candidates.

It also encourages them to eliminate entry-level positions in order to cut costs, she said.

The Swedish Trade Union Confederation (LO), a close ally of the Social Democratic party, which dominated political life in Sweden for much of the past century, painted a very different picture, saying that the extent of the problem has been exaggerated.

"Many of those between 15 and 19 who are registered as unemployed are full-time students looking for part-time work, and that group of people really isn't a problem," said Oscar Ernerot, an ombudsman at LO.

"Sweden has a higher number of full-time students looking for part-time work," he added when asked about comparisons with countries that have a lower rate of youth unemployment.

Out of those between 20 and 24 years old, the main problem was a growing number of people who have failed to complete their secondary education, and for whom there is little demand in the labour market, Ernerot added, referring to a dwindling number of unskilled labour jobs.

The centre-right government should invest more in education and projects that would create jobs for those people, he argued.

Stripping out full-time students and those who have been unemployed for less than a month, Sweden's youth unemployment would fall to around seven or eight percent, the LO ombudsman said.

However, Sahlen maintained that the statistics were accurate.

"It seems odd that Sweden should have more full-time students looking for part-time work than other countries do, given that they all measure unemployment in the same way," she said.

While there is little political appetite to relax Sweden's labour laws, LO has signalled that it may back a government proposal on youth apprenticeships, under which young people would be paid less than is currently mandated by the unions.

"It's not a lower salary, you get the same hourly wage," chairman Karl-Petter Thorwaldsson on Sunday told public broadcaster SVT, referring to a clause that says the apprentice has to spend 25 percent of the time studying.

But he added: "Something isn't working. When young people leave school they are not getting the jobs they have been trained for."

Meanwhile, Lundborg, the 25 year-old graduate, continues to look for work.

"Many of the companies I speak to sound positive towards me as a person, but say they don't need any more staff," he said.

AFP/The Local/og
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09:28 November 19, 2012 by isenhand
-Soren Billing looks into the Swedish model and how it's leaving young Swedes jobless.-

The Swedish Model collapsed in the early 1990s (largely because it worked too well). The Swedish Model relied on cooperation between companies, unions and the government. As we have now pushed more a free market, that cooperation hardly exists any more, hence the problem. The laws on employment were for a bygone age. Either Sweden needs to rebuild that cooperation or scape it all together and go more for a free market. If we do the later, we will end up with for more problems! A policy of cooperation and equality tends to produce an overall better society. One that moves away form that tend to produce a society with poor conditions for the majority.
10:00 November 19, 2012 by Just_Kidding
Many of Swedish students keep staying in Universities while what they really want is a job. Staying in a University is a better option for many of them, socially and financially. It is wrong to fool ourselves by claiming that these students shouldn't be counted as unemployed.
10:16 November 19, 2012 by beanjeanie
totally agree with Sahlen comments regarding labour laws. When you have graduates coming out of university at an age of 24-25 versus 20-21 in countries such as Australia, Uk, clearly something is missing (youth job opportunities). Imagine not being able to get a job in your field of studies after graduating around 21, you will most likely go back to studying again (as education is free and you have to be productive) selecting a more employable degree for another 3 years. Hopefully by the time age 24-25 plus all your other part time job experiences over the years, it will then be more attractive to your future prospective employer. I hope this changes so that we give the youths in Sweden a brighter future and more opportunities earlier.
11:27 November 19, 2012 by bourgeoisieboheme
I would think, with the large number of young unemployed Swedes, that the government would stop the massive inflow of immigrants to "work the jobs Swedes won't" as it seems to me there is a disconnect in the labor market. It is amply supplied with low skilled workers, it just needs incentives to make the youth work!
12:06 November 19, 2012 by RobinHood
The Swedish Trade Union Confederation and the Social Democrat Party, desperate to avoid the suggestion that their draconian employment protection laws and high wage demands are causing the youth unemployment problem, have taken to arguing that there is in fact no youth unemployment problem at all. It's all just a statistical anomaly involving students, they say. Everything is just fine, they say.

It would be helpful to Sweden if the unions played a part in resolving the problem. If they can't even face up to there being a problem in the first place, and that it is caused by themselves, well …… what use are they?
14:21 November 19, 2012 by NyDag
It is not in the least bit surprising. There is already a lot of unemployment and the government takes in further immigrants from the middle east, making it even more difficult for young Swedes to get jobs, in spite of the fact that all of the immigrants are useless and virtually unemployable. Employers don't care about that as long as they can take someone on who's willing to be pushed about and take a pay cut!
00:39 November 20, 2012 by rabbemos
Importing immigrants is part of the plan to deconstruct the social welfare state. If there was low unemployment then people could demand more, high unemployment gives politicians the ability to take away more.

"Everybody reads the first paragraph of Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations where he talks about how wonderful the division of labor is. But not many people get to the point hundreds of pages later, where he says that division of labor will destroy human beings and turn people into creatures as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human being to be. And therefore in any civilized society the government is going to have to take some measures to prevent division of labor from proceeding to its limits"...The problem is governments are not civilized they just want to maintain control and they do so by dividing us up by labor and a host of other divisions.
08:49 November 20, 2012 by Just_Kidding
@rabbemos: I am not sure if the topic here is the "division of labor", but maybe some people think they are typing behind computers that are designed by some Amish high school teacher that cook their own bread from the wheat they grow and grind and dig their own cave using their own stone tools.
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