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Department of the Parhamentary Library Youth Issues .. • , ,l- !·H ;,: ,t /r~. --~~~~t~P. '1, _. 3ift = ISSN 1037-2938 CopyrightCommonwealthofAustralia 1993 Excepttotheextentoftheusespermittedunderthe CopyrightAct1968,nopartofthispublicationmay bereproducedortransmittedinanyformorbyaIXfmeansincludinginformationstorageandretrieval syste~withoutthepriorwrittenconsentoftheDepartmentoftheParliamentaryLibrmy, otherthan byMembersoftheAustralianParliamentinthecourseoftheirofficialduties. PubliehedbytheDepartmentoftheParliementalyLibrary, 1993 Adrienne MiIlbank Education and Welfare Group 10 May 1993 Parliamentary Research Service Background Paper Number 9 1993 Youth Issues Telephone: 062772410 Facshnile:062772407 ThispaperhasbeenpreparedforgeneraldistributiontoMembersoftheAustralianParliament. ReadersoutsidetheParliamentareremindedthatthisianotanAustralianGovernmentdocument, but a paperpreparedbythe authorandpuhlishedbytheParliamentaryIleaearchServicetocontributeto considerationoftheissuesbySenatorsandMembers.TheviewsexpressedinthisPaperarethOfJeofthe authorand do not necessarily reflectthoae ofthe Parliamentary Research Service and are not to be attributedtotheDepartmentoftheParliamentaryLibnuy. CONTENTS Introduction 1 Background '.' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1 Public concern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1 Youth Unemployment 2 Public perceptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Government ~d Opposition policies 4 A minimum youth wage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Traineeships 6 Who are the young unemployed? 6 The youth labour market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 7 Income Support ; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Public perceptions 8 Government policies and programs 9 Job Search and Newstart Allowances 9 Research : 10 Views ofcommentators 11 Increased Youth Dependency 12 Public perceptions . . . . . . .. 12 Effects on families . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 13 Views ofcommentators 13 HomeL¥wnwm 14 Public perceptions . . . . . . . . . .. 14 Government response 14 Extent ofyouth homelessness 14 Current issues and concerns 15 Drugs ' 16 Public perceptions .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 16 Research 17 Tobacco 17 Alcohol 17 Illicit drugs 18 Current issues and concerns 18 Youth Suicide 19 Public perceptions 19 Extent ofyouth suicide, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 19 Causes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 20 Current issues and concerns 21 i Youth Crime 21 Public perceptions 21 Extent and nature ofyouth crime 23 Characteristics ofyoung offenders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 24 Current issues and concerns 25 Youth Attitudes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . •. 26 Views ofcommentators and socialresearchers . . . . . . . . . . . .. 26 Mackay Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 26 Mattingly and Partners 1990 survey 27 ANOP 1990 youth survey. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 28 Australian Democrats' Youth Poll '92 . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. 28 Youth attitudes to family and work : 28 Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 29 Endnotes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 31 Appendix: 1992 and 1993 Lists ofPRS Publications Inclusion: Readers' Feedback Questionnaire Tear-off ii Youth Issues 1 Introduction J Background The 1960s and 1970s were decades marked in Australia·as in other Western countries by relative economic stability and growth but with significant changes in social values and behaviour. These were reflected in higher rates ofdivorce and remarriage, and the growth of single parent, blended and working mother families. The 1980s and early 1990s have been marked byconsiderable change to the economic structure, andthewidespreadintroductionofnewtechnologies, as well as the continuing effects ofthe social changes ofprevious decades. Inthe changingworldeconomicandpoliticalrelationships ofthe 1980s Australia has been generally perceived as no longer able to rely on rural and mineral resources, no longer able to afford to subsidise manufacturing, and as beingforced to restructure its economic base in order to compete with more productive and competitive countries (particularly those developing in SE and NE Asia, as well as a revitalised Europe). The r~structuring and deregulation that commencedinthe early1980swiththe aim ofproducinga more skilled and productive workforce, together with a world-wide economic recession in the late 1980s, has meant increasing levels of unemployment, particularly for those persons without the skills to be utilised by changing industrial requirements. The skilling of the workforce, productivity reforms including increased and now almost universal use of new technology such as computers and word processors and an expanded labour market have virtually eliminated many traditional 'entry-level'jobs for young people in Australia. Public concern These changes have resulted in a situation where young people entering the labour market in the 1990s are facing a precarious . economicand employmentfuture. Theirparentsandgrandparents are concerned about the effects of the social, economic and structural changes that have occurred over the last twentyyears, and the effects of the economic recession which began in the 1980s. They are concerned in particular about their children's and grandchildren's future. They worry especially about whether they will compete successfully in school and further studies and training, and whether they will be able to obtain employment. They worry about whether theywill cope, or whether theywill turn to drugs, a 'sub-culture' ofthe streets, and crime. These concerns are fundamental to all families and inevitably are reflected in the media, whose reports of such issues and portrayal of 2 Youth Issues youth 'problems' range from the factual and analyticaL to the more sensational and emotional. Media reports have both reflected and reinforced the concerns ofadults and young people, and the issues of youth unemployment, homelessness and the "future of young people have been the focus ofa good deal ofattention over the past few years. In 1992, in particular in the months surrounding the release of the Carmichael1 and Mayer Reports2 on youth training and core competency requirements, the Opposition's policy to introduce a minimum youth wage and the Government's Youth Summit, youth issues dominated the attention ofallsections ofthe community. From May onwards, the year was marked by an enormous amount of coverage ofthe growth ofyouth unemployment, and ofissues such as youth crime, binge drinking, illicit drug taking and suicide. This Paper aims to provide an overview of the current major youth issues ofunemployment and incomesupport, and ofinterrelated social 'problems' such as increased youth dependency, homelessness, drug abuse, crime and suicide. It attempts to provide information on current public perceptions of youth issues as reflected by media coverage over the last couple ofyears;.the actual nature and extent of youth 'problems' as indicated by research undertaken since 1989, and' the views ofleading commentators in the area. It aims also to provide anoverviewofthe attitudes,perceptions, values andpriorities ofyoung people as revealed through market and socialresearch conductedover the last four years. Youth Unemployment Public perceptions Obtaining meaningful employment has always been the key issue of concern to youngAustralians. Increasingly over the past decade, and in the last couple ofyears in particular the growth and extent ofyouth unemployment has been a major focus of concern within the general community. In 1992 general unemployment rates of over eleven per cent and youth unemployment rates ofover 30 per cent - and over 40 per cent in some areas - were being widely reported. Catherine Blakers3 has noted that continuingattention on the difficulties facing young job seekers has seen a change in the image portrayed in the media of the young unemployed. In the 1990s, they have rarely been described (as theyhad often beenin previous decades bysome sections of the media) as lazy and enjoying a work free existence at the taxpayers' expense. Media reportage around the time of the Youth Summit in July 1992 described unemployed youth in highly emotive terms: as being rejected and discarded from society, prevented from makingthe transition to independent adulthood, taken for granted by Youth Issues 3 their parents' generation, vulnerable to depression, ill-health, homelessness, crime, drugs, suicide, and likelyto be livingin poverty4. In.recent years a general consensus appears to have emerged that blamingyoungpeople themselves is unproductive, and that high levels ofyouth unemployment are the result oftechnological and structural .changes in the economy5.. The effectiveness of these changes in abolishing 'entry-level' jobs formerly taken by young people is indeed apparent everywhere: telephones and facsimiles have replaced telegrams; maintenance requirementshave beenreduced, employment has declined in manufacturing and in industries such as printing (formerly a significant employer of teenage males) because of computerised equipment. Clerical, typing and other office jobs have disappeared with the introduction of increasingly sophisticated word processors, photocopiers and computers. Higher entry qualifications have closed off work in nursing, in banks and in the public service. It has become more widely understood that the economic recession is only one reason for the decline in the full-time employment opportunities for the young, and that this decline is also the result of changes in employment patterns accompanying rising productivity: that is, those very factors which are increasingthe productivity ofthe economyand raising the efficiencyofthe skills base are removingjobs for the young - especially for unskilled 15 to 19 year olds. Besides more sophisticated and computerised machinery replacing unskilled workers, more sophisticatedcorporate management techniques, e.g. in selection of job applicants, and subcontracting, are also closing off traditional entry-level openings. Jobs for youngunskilled fifteen to nineteenyear olds are estimated to have contracted from 600 000 in 1966 to 240 000 in 1992 because of technological and productivity advances. Six in ten of those aged fIfteen to nineteen years were infull-time work in 1966, nowthere are two in ten. Education participation for this age group has doubled since the mid 1960s - from one in three to two in three6 • Anumber ofcommentators have pointed out that the small number of young people in the labour market (as opposed to being in school-and higher education) has created an exaggerated impression ofthe extent of youth unemployment. At the time of the Youth Summit in July 1992, ofthe approximately 1 317 000 fifteen to nineteen year olds in Australia, 85.7 000 were in full-time education, 240 000 in full-time employment, and 124 000 (less than ten per cent of the total teenage population) were lookingfor work7• It has also been pointed out that manypost-compulsoryage schoolstudents wouldprefertobe working, and that youth unemployme~tlevels would be much higher if they enteredthe labourforce. Somecommentatorshave further pointedout that most long-term unemployment is found in the over 45 age group, 4 Youth Issues and that the outlook for older unemployed unskilled or semi-skilled factory workers, especiallyin areas such as Wollongong, PortKembla and Geelong, is more bleak than that ofunemployed youths. Unemploymentamongyouthhas howeverremained the focus ofmedia attention, and is clearly a highly emotive issue among voters. Besides the natural concern ofparents for their children's future and the well being ofthe next generation, reasons for this could include a sense of unease and even guiltthataftera periodofcomparativeprosperity, the next generation seem to be paying the price of new technology, structural change and productivity reforms. A fear has been reported amongst middle class Australians of a growing culture among the young of chronic unemployment and dependency: of an emerging underclass with its associations ofdrug addiction, and violent crime9 • Media reportage ofyouth unemployment last year around the time of the Youth Summit reflected, and perhaps helped create a climate of expectationandbeliefinthe communitythatpoliciesshouldandwould be developed to somehow stimulate the creation ofjobs for the young, and give more supportand hope to theyoungunemployed. The Prime Minister was generally praised for the restraint of the Government's response following the Summit for targeting most ofthe extra $720m allocated to kickstart the 'Carmichael' national vocational training reforms and traineeships rather than short term job creationlO A • high level of media attention and perhaps community expectation regarding youth unemployment remained, however, during the remainder of 1992. This was reflected to some extent in the reaction to the report of the Senate Standing Committee on Employment Education and Trainingonthe implications ofsustained high levels of youth unemployment, tabled in Parliament 16 December 199211 . While acknowledged for effectively giving expression to the high level ofconsternationand concern in the community regardingthe plightof theyoungunemployed andtheirfamilies, thereporthasbeencriticised for the inadequacy of its recommendations12• Government and Opposition policies A minimum youth wage The Opposition policy ofbringing in a minimum youth wage of$3 to $3.50 per hour has been supported by several commentator.s as being based on two entirely arguable propositions: since the compression of . age-based wage relativities in the 1970s, unskilled youth have been priced out of the labour market; and being in a low paid job itself provides valuable training and is preferable to havingnojob at all. In the words of Frank Devine '...the working kid moves in a milieu far

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rural and mineral resources, no longer able to afford to subsidise .. While other commentators have a less apocryphal view ofthe prospects .. youth culture such as heavy metal rock music, and suggested to be in f 1:' ,.-. While talk of an 'epidemic' of suicide has been largely discounted, its appa
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