April 5, 2007
ODDLY ENOUGH, IT IS ONLY FRANCOPHILES WHO THINK SO LITTLE OF THE FRENCH...:
Lost youth (Frédéric Niel, 09 April 2007, New Statesman)
Young French people are deeply frustrated by lack of opportunity and a lack of respect from their parents' generation."Unemployment and instability make us feel vulnerable," says Marion, a 23-year-old Master's student of communications taking part in a youth debate on the main issues of the French presidential campaign. "Our generation has to cope with a health insurance deficit, and pay for our parents' pensions, while spending half of our small salaries on rent. We'd be happy to reach our parents' standard of living. No matter how qualified we are, we fear for the future."
Like many young people in France, Marion has good reason to be worried. The biggest challenge facing her is that it now takes longer to find a proper job. In 1982, only 10 per cent of young people in France failed to find a steady job within three years of leaving education. In 2004, the figure stood at more than a quarter, and finding permanent work can take up to several years of internships and temporary contracts. Tired of working for little or no money, one group of disaffected interns has even formed a campaign group, Génération-Précaire (www.generation-precaire.org), to oppose what it sees as a latter-day form of slavery.
Those people lucky enough to find work will discover that the pay gap between generations has also widened. In 1975, workers aged 50 earned 15 per cent more, on average, than workers aged 30. Today this gap stands at 40 per cent, according to the sociologist Louis Chauvel.
And it's not just the jobs market that is proving difficult for young French people, who are less well represented politically than they used to be. In 1982, the average age of a politician or a trade-union delegate was 45. In 2000, according to the French National Institute for Statistics and Economic Studies, it was 59.
...that they believe young Frenchmen will stay there and tolerate such a dismal future.
Unlike the dog-eat-dog America, France has life job protection. Just like China and the Soviet Union used to have. The only problem is whose job it is protecting. Btw, it's the recent university graduates who protested and rioted against job regulation changes last year.
Posted by: ic at April 5, 2007 12:38 PM