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In Romania, 1 in 6 young people is unemployed

The unemployment rate among the young people in Romania aged 15-24 years maintains at a high level despite widespread workforce crisis suggesting difficulties in the transition from the education system to the labour market.

In the last quarter of last year, 16.2 percent of young people in Romania were considered unemployed, compared with a national unemployment rate of 4.2 percent, according to fresh official data.

The situation is even worse considering the young people in Romania aged between 20 and 34 years.

Official data show that more than one out of five (21.4 percent) of young people in Romania aged between 20 and 34 years is neither in employment nor in education or training, one of the highest rates among the European Union member states.

This situation is a major concern in terms of employment at the EU level as this segment of population is a particular category of economically inactive persons.

The highest rates in the EU are registered in Italy, Greece, Bulgaria, Croatia and Romania, exceeding by far the EU average.

“The rate young people neither in employment nor in education or training in Romania signals difficulties in transitioning from the education system to the labour market and the problems connected to employment for the young population, outside the education system,” the National Institute of Statistics (INS) said in a recent study.

In Romania, 21.4 percent of youth aged 20-34 years were neither in employment, nor in education or training in 2017 and the rate is higher in the case of women.

The rate young people neither in employment nor in education or training shows wide variations between regions in Romania.

In 2017, the highest value of the indicator for the young people aged 15-24 years was recorded in southern Transylvania / Centru region (22.3 percent), followed by Sud-Est (20.5 percent) and Sud-Muntenia (19.6 percent).

On the opposite end of the scale, Bucharest-Ilfov (9.8 percent), Moldova / Nord-Est (10.2 percent), and northern Transylvania / Nord-Vest (10.3 percent) have the lowest rates and are below the EU average.

In 2017, around 10.9 percent of the persons aged 15-24 years in the EU were neither in employment nor in education or training (11.2 percent of women and 10.7 percent of men).

Romania’s job vacancy rate rose by 0.07 percentage point in the last quarter of 2018 compared with the fourth quarter of 2017, to 1.20 percent, but some sectors are much more affected than others.

The number of unoccupied jobs rose by 4,147 year-on-year, to 58,810 in the last quarter of 2018.

The impressive economic growth Romania has been experiencing during the last few years has put increasing pressure on employers to find skilled workers in order to expand their businesses but the latest official data show that Romania is far from being considered to be in a severe “workforce crisis” situation.

According to official data, workforce shortage is concentrated in some areas like services (3.4 percent job vacancy rate in Q4 2018), transport (1.9 percent) and IT (1.8 percent), a consequence of the fact that much of the economic growth in Romania is the product of a consumer bonanza, stimulated by years of wage-led growth government policy.

But the real labor shortage is currently experienced in EU by the advanced economies, with sophisticated structures and high wages.

Among the EU member states, the highest job vacancy rates in the third quarter of 2018 were recorded in the Czech Republic (5.9 percent), Belgium (3.6 percent), Germany, Austria and the Netherlands (all 3 percent), according to Eurostat.

In fact, Romania ranks among the EU member states with low job vacancy rates despite claims of widespread workforce crisis.

 

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