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Youth employment

Youth employment - News

European towns struggle to retain youth, fight unemployment


While youth unemployment across the bloc has decreased compared to last year, European towns are struggling to remain attractive to young people.

Youth unemployment in the EU is currently at 13.8% and has decreased compared to last year, but the rate varies from region to region, with the highest number of unemployed young people in the regions of Southern Europe.

In the Portuguese municipality of Mourão, a small town near the border with Spain, the youth unemployment rate is at 24.6%.

According to Mayor João Fortes, while many young people would like to stay, they end up moving to other cities where they find more job opportunities, such as Evora, Porto or Lisbon.

Ageing towns

“I really would like them to come [back] because we are ageing so much that we need young people to build their own projects, their own family,” Fortes told EURACTIV.

Other mayors are raising similar concerns regarding the impact of demographic changes on their municipalities.

Alexandros Paschalis, deputy mayor of Edessa, a small Greek town with a 45% overall unemployment rate, said the “city is getting older and older.”

“Most of the people who go to study don’t have the opportunity to come back to do the work they study for,” he said at a conference organised during the EU Regions Week, adding that local authorities often lack the tools to address youth unemployment.

The city of Klaipėda on the Lithuanian coast is also facing a similar challenge to retain local youth.

According to mayor Vytautas Grubliauskas, “the goal is not to stop them, but to do everything so they can come back.”

Building infrastructure

In Grubliauskas’ view, to reduce unemployment and retain young talents, regions and cities need to be “attractive from the infrastructural point of view.”

“It is not enough to only create jobs, we also need to have the adequate conditions in place,” including infrastructure to compensate for lower salaries, he said.

Youth unemployment in Klaipėda is lower than the European average and the overall unemployment rate, with just over 8% of the population between 16 and 29 years of age out of a job.

The mayor said the municipality is “approaching these challenges in a good way,” for instance cooperating with universities and NGOs. The city has also created a funding mechanism to attract specialists in the areas most affected by labour shortages, such as IT technicians, doctors, and teachers.

In his view, cities and regions have the responsibility to make sure both the city infrastructure and choice of jobs are attractive to young people. At the same time, he said professional guidance is critical to help young people understand their talents.

Training

At the EU level, the Commission is promoting vocational training to fill gaps in the labour market and give young people the skills needed to find employment.

However, the problem “cannot be solved in six months,” according to Andrea Glorioso, policy officer at the European Commission.

“Education policy takes a lot of time, in order to see the effect we need to have a bit of patience,” he said.

Meanwhile, the municipality of Mourão is trying to address the problem locally, giving young people the opportunity to carry out work experience in the municipality.

The idea is for them to develop competences the municipality does not have and for which it has to rely on external consultants.

“Why not try to teach these kids how to do it?” Fortes said.

“It will require time, obviously, but after that time perhaps we’re going to have the inside resources to manage these kind of tasks.”

This article was first published by EurActiv. Real the whole text.

High-Level Political Forum (HLPF)

Promoting the Global Goals - News 2023

Hannah-Lea Braun: New generations of local and regional leaders are at the heart of the Sustainable Development Goals


CEMR and PLATFORMA were present at last month’s High-Level Political Forum (HLPF), a key event dedicated to sustainable development held every year at the United Nations headquarters in New York. The delegation was made up of some twenty representatives of national associations of local and regional government and partners, including Hannah-Lea Braun, local councillor for Maichingen (Sindelfingen, Germany) and member of the Committee of Young European Local Authorities.

Together, delegate members expressed the voice of European territories to the local and regional government sessions. These focused on the issues posed by the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the wake of the global pandemic, including those related to access to quality education (SDG4), gender equality (SDG5) and partnerships for the global goals (SDG17).

On the occasion of the Local and Regional Government Day and Forum (11-12 July), Hannah-Lea Braun highlighted the crucial role of local and regional governments in building a more sustainable, inclusive and egalitarian society, starting with gender equality, a topic at the heart of CEMR’s work.

The spotlight was also put on youth during a meeting with Olof Skoog, the European Union’s Ambassador to the United Nations in New York. This year 2022 having been declared “European Year of Youth” by EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Hannah-Lea Braun reminded the audience of the crucial importance of taking into consideration the expectations of European youth. This entails giving the means necessary for the new generations of citizens and local elected representatives to take part in the decision-making process and in the deployment of public policies implementing the SDGs.

The presence of PLATFORMA and CEMR’s members and partners was also an opportunity to highlight the work done to localise the SDGs, documented notably in their recent annual report on the topic.

Africa-Europe partnership

Africa - Press

Connecting young local leaders


Europe and Africa face more and more common challenges, there is a growing need for greater cooperation and solidarity, starting with the local level. Many of these challenges are long-term and intergenerational, meaning young people are deeply affected. And indeed who better to talk about the world of tomorrow than the youth?
 
That’s why we are holding the “Africa-Europe partnership: Connecting young local leaders!” event gathering young local and regional elected officials, youth organisations, representatives and partners from Europe and Africa to tackle one big question: how should African and European young local leaders organise their collaboration?
 
The event will explore how local leaders can structure their future dialogue and provide input to major events such as the African Union-European Union summits and Africities. The session will build upon previous work begun in Abidjan and Marrakesh in 2018.
 
The event will take place over two days on 23-24 June 2021. During the opening session, inspiring young leaders will share their reflections on a future for Africa-Europe relations that takes into account the needs and wishes of young people in an increasingly connected world.
 
The following day, we’ll discuss the future of this partnership during a practical working group session and gather ideas to structure the dialogue and address common challenges together from a local perspective.
 
So don’t hesitate to come along to build the foundations of a partnership that will shake up Europe-Africa relations as we know them!
 
Dates: 23-24 June
Agenda
Registration link