Young people with only high school diplomas or less are hardest hit by unemployment
Published: Friday, April 22, 2011, 1:46 PM
AP graphic Only about a third of young people with a high school education or less are working full time. Young people who try to find work straight out of high school aren't faring well in today's tough economy.
Only about a third of young people with a high school education or less are working full time, compared to two-thirds of recent college grads, according to an Associated Press-Viacom poll.
Four in 10 of those surveyed whose education stopped at high school are unemployed. Less than a quarter have part-time jobs, the poll of 18- to 24-year-olds found.
The unemployment rate has been over 20 percent each March for the past three years for high school graduates ages 16-24 who have no college education. That's up from 10 percent in March 2007 and 14.5 percent a year later.Three-fourths of those who chose not to go to college cited cost as the reason and say they hope to return to trade school or college someday.
While prospects are better for young college grads, they still lag far behind older college-educated workers. About 9.3 percent of young college grads are unemployed, more than double the 4.7 percent unemployment rate for college graduates age 25 and older, according to a report from the Economic Policy Institute.
Young high school graduates are not keeping pace with their older peers either, the EPI reports. "Their 22.5 percent unemployment rate is more than double the 10.3 percent rate among high school graduates age 25 and older."Unemployment is even higher among minorities with only a high school education.
The unemployment rate for black high school graduates under age 25 and not enrolled in school was 31.8 percent, compared with 22.8 percent for Hispanic high school graduates and 20.3 percent for white high school graduates.