Jobless Youth
Europe is failing in the fight against youth unemployment. While the German government's efforts remain largely symbolic, Southern European leaders pander to older voters by defending the status quo
BY SVEN
BÖLL, MARKUS DETTMER, FIONA EHLERS, MANFRED ERTEL, CORNELIA SCHMERGAL AND
HELENE ZUBER
Stylia
Kampani did everything right, and she still doesn't know what the future holds
for her. The 23-year-old studied international relations in her native Greece
and spent a year at the University of Bremen in northern Germany. She completed
an internship at the foreign ministry in Athens and worked for the Greek
Embassy in Berlin. Now she is doing an unpaid internship with the prestigious
Athens daily newspaper Kathimerini. And what happens after that?
"Good question," says Kampani. "I don't know."
"None
of my friends believes that we have a future or will be able to live a normal
life," says Kampani. "That wasn't quite the case four years ago."
Four
years ago -- that was before the euro
crisis began.
Since then, the Greek government has approved a series of austerity programs,
which have been especially hard on young people. The unemployment rate among
Greeks under 25 has been above 50 percent for months. The situation is
similarly dramatic in Spain, Portugal and Italy. According to Eurostat, the European
Union's statistics office, the rate of unemployment among young adults in the
EU has climbed to 23.5 percent. A lost generation is taking shape in Europe. And
European governments seem clueless when they hear the things people like
Athenian university graduate Alexandros are saying: "We don't want to
leave Greece, but the constant uncertainty makes us
tired and depressed."
Instead
of launching effective education and training programs to prepare Southern
European youth for a professional life after the crisis, the Continent's
political elites preferred to wage old ideological battles. There were growing
calls for traditional economic stimulus programs at the European Commission in
Brussels. The governments of debt-ridden countries paid more attention to the
status quo of their primarily older voters. Meanwhile, the creditor nations in
the north were opposed to anything that could cost money.
In this
way, Europe wasted valuable time, at least until governments were shaken early
this month by news of a very worrisome record: Unemployment among 15- to 24-year-olds has
climbed above 60 percent in Greece.