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Youth unemployment rate in OECD countries (15–24 age) [3] Around 17 percent of the world population, or almost 1.26 billion people, is between the ages of 15 and 24. [4] The United Nations defines this age range as the period when compulsory education typically ends. [5] Of this category, around 87% live in developing countries. [6]
Youth unemployment rates in 2023 returned to their pre-pandemic rates or lower in most, but not all subregions. For young people in the Arab States, East Asia, and South-East Asia and the Pacific ...
The prevalence of HIV/AIDS amongst the youth population in Sub-Saharan Africa varies greatly both within and between countries. In 2009, 20 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa accounted for an estimated 69% of the world's new HIV infections among young people, [51] with an estimated 4.3% of young women and 1.5% of young men in the region living ...
Unemployment rate (2021) [1] This is a list of countries by unemployment rate.Methods of calculation and presentation of unemployment rate vary from country to country. Some countries count insured unemployed only, some count those in receipt of welfare benefit only, some count the disabled and other permanently unemployable people, some countries count those who choose (and are financially ...
Fu said the release of unemployment data for youth as well as other age groups had been suspended because “the economy and society are constantly developing and changing, statistics need to be ...
In Japan and South Korea, youth unemployment rates were at historic lows. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that youth unemployment in July was 9.8%, up from 8.7% the same period last year.
The "Day of Revolt" on 25 January 2011 in Cairo. Waithood (a portmanteau of "wait" and "adulthood") is a period of stagnation in the lives of young unemployed college graduates in various industrializing and developing nations or regions, primarily in the Middle East, North Africa and India, where their expertise is still not widely needed or applicable.
One year on, youth unemployment remains a headache, with the reconfigured jobless rate spiking to a 2024 high of 17.1% in July, as 11.79 million college students graduated this summer in an ...