Go to college or being unemployed
When it comes to bad weather, one needs shelter. The same is true when it comes to young adults surviving a tough economic period, such as…
When it comes to bad weather, one needs shelter. The same is true when it comes to young adults surviving a tough economic period, such as the Great Recession that started in 2008. The idea is high school graduates can shelter themselves by either going to college or entering the job market.
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A recent Economic Policy Institute study The Class of 2014 painted a dire picture for todays youth, with young high school graduates experiencing an unemployment rate of 22.9 percent (compared with 15.9 percent in 2007).
The unemployment rate for young people overall is extremely high, so the question gets raised, are people able to shelter in school because job opportunities are so weak? Are we seeing enrollment rates pick up? Economic Policy Institute Economist Heidi Shierholz told VOXXI.
What we find is between 2007 and 2012 increases in enrollment rates were no bigger than when the recession hit. It didnt seem to be that people were sheltering in school and then since 2013, enrollment rates have plummeted.So not only are they not sheltering in school, but theres been a big drop. Shierholz said the result is an increase in the share of young people who are disconnected and idle. This notion is substantiated by data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics stating last fall less than 66 percent of recent high school graduates enrolled in college, which is down from 70 percent in 2009.
Theyre not enrolled in school, not employed, Shierholz said. Theyre just sort of this two key paths that young people can take to set themselves up for their future getting a job or getting an additional degree. Those have just been blocked. While Shierholz said she doesnt include enrollment rates broken down by race, another recently released study does.