Unfortunately
for the new member states, especially Romania
and Bulgaria ,
the year 2007 wasn’t just the year of the last extension of the EU, but it also
meant the start of the global crisis. Although the crisis affected in different
ways, it affected all EU states, the financial and the real economy areas, both
the rich and the poor states of the EU.
In a Europe that took pride in its market’s social economy,
the concern regarding the evolutions on the labor market got bigger. On the 28th
of September the authorities in Bruxelles made public all the data referring to
the level of unemployment in the EU states and how the data changed in the
first semester of 2012. Obviously, the fact that most of the important European
economies have literally reached their lowest point regarding the economic and
financial points of views in 2012, were of no help at all to the labor market.
The total number of unemployed people in all the 27 member states of the EU has
reached a level never seen before: 25.3 million people. The unemployment rate
in the Euro Zone has reached, judging from the bulletins of the European
Committee, a new top level (11.4%). Furthermore, the tendencies are considered
to be worthy of concern, regarding that in 17 out of 27 member states the
unemployment rate has increased. Methodologically speaking, that determining of
the unemployment rate by Eurostat is done, starting the definition recommended
by ILO (International Labor Organization). According to this definition, an
unemployed person is any person between 15 and 74 years old who doesn’t have a
job, is available for employment in the next 2 weeks and has actively looked
for a workplace in the last 4 weeks. The unemployment rate is determined as a
percentage ratio between the number of unemployed people and the active
population. Eurostat judges active population as the employed people together
with unemployed people.
What is
the cause of this? There are a lot of them. The economical growth rate, along
with a high work productivity, is not anymore capable of creating new work
places, so as to assure a full occupation. The technical progress, on the short
term, is the cause of unemployment, more or less, strongly related to the
financial ability of countries to assimilate everything scientific research
comes up with. The economical crisis, to which we can refer to as decreases or
stagnations in the economical activity, is increasing the number of unemployed
people, and their integration, in the boom period, can be at a low rate. The
changes in the structure of economic sectors, under the impact of diversity in
the goods request, of the economical crisis, inevitably lead, on the long run,
to a decrease in the request of a job.
In Romania ,
unemployment has its roots, partially, in the changes in the structure of the
national economy, in what concerns the efficiency rate, in order to adapt to a competitive
environment. The immigration of a part of the active population in order to
seek employment in different countries will increase the offer of labor force
inside those states. Emigration has an opposite effect, that of decreasing the
labor force in the resident country.
The
consequences of unemployment are:
-
Nationally speaking, the exclusion of some part of the labor force influences
the dynamic of the GDP, meaning that the training, the qualifying of the
unemployed necessitated expenses from both the person and the society, expenses
which are not to be recovered in the case of long term unemployment.
-Judging from the person-family point of view, the labor force weakens
and it becomes harder to find a job. A great role is the one that the moral and
mental status has, which affects the person becoming unemployed in a larger
amount than he is affected by the economical side.
In
comparison with the rest of the EU states, Romania is in a pretty good
position – 7th place out of 27 countries and an unemployment rate of
just 7.1%, more than 3 times less than the European maximum rate, something
that should bring happiness to the country. Our concern is due to understanding
the fact that imbalance on the labor market in Romania has different ways of
behaving. It can be reflected in structural aspects (the unemployed people
working in the agricultural area, the great number of pensioners, the great
number of emigrants), which makes unemployment in Romania to be much harder to deal
with. The number of unemployed people (aged from 15 to 74 years old), estimated
for June 2012 is of 735.000 people, decreasing in comparison to the month
before ( 744.000) and increasing compared to the same month from the year
before (725.000). The unemployment rate among males is of 8.6%, while the one
among females is of 6.4%. For adults (25-74 years old), the unemployment rate
was estimated at 6.1% in June 2012 (7% of which were men, while 4.9% were women).
The number of unemployed people aged between 25 and 74 years old accounts 73.1%
of the total number of unemployed people estimated for June 2012.
There are
some measures that should be taken in order to deal with unemployment in the EU
states. Firstly, coming up with solutions for creating new work places by
giving grants to the ones that do, by replacing taxes related to labor force
with environmental taxes. Secondly, the exploitation of the huge potential of
creating work places represented by the green economy, an area where 20 mil
jobs should be created by 2020. Thirdly, the improvement of the health labor
work. One last solution could be
supporting highly qualified labor force in the IT domain and the boost
to acquire digital skills within the labor force. In Romania , unemployment rate can be
decreased by increasing investments and creating modern structures within this
area, rational fares and increasing the revenues of the economic agents and of
the country itself.
These
measures need financial support. Lately, EU announced that it will allocate 2.7
billion euro out of the structural funds to help fight unemployment, after it
had already allocated 7.3 billion euro. This money prioritizes in fighting
against unemployment within youngsters, which has reached unimaginable rate.
The great imbalance in the youth labor force is due not only to the lack of
jobs, but also the lack of professional training, which is the main cause why
economic agents have doubts whether to hire young people or not. Among
youngsters, unemployed also occurs because of their tendency to look for better
paid jobs, which slows them from actively integrating. The unemployment among
youth people in the EU reached 22.5% in July, and in Romania it has a rate of 25%.
Yet,
what happens with the ones not registered? Or with the huge number of those not
receiving unemployment benefits anymore? In other words, if we counted them as
well, one way or another, the unemployment rate would be much bigger.
Maria-Alexandra Iftene
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