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June 17, 2008
Idle Hands: Why The Candidates Must Focus on America's Youth
(Editor's note: This post originally appeared on Jeff Chang's blog, Zentronix.)
This summer could be the worst ever for teens looking for work, according to experts. Less than one in three youths may find summer jobs.
In recent years, the youth jobless rate has soared to record highs. In cities like Chicago, three in four teens, including seven in eight Black teens, did not work in 2006. But this summer could mark the highest level of youth joblessness since the end of World War II.
The shrinking economy and rising unemployment rates are to blame, as laid-off workers compete with young people for shrinking piece of the pie. Budget cuts have led to the ending of federal, state, and city youth jobs programs.
But the biggest problem is a lack of political interest.
Earlier this year, George W. Bush and Democratic Congressional leadership killed a $1 billion proposal to create youth jobs. At the same time, the Justice Department gave a $500,000 grant to a George H.W. Bush-chaired golf program supposedly meant to stop juvenile crime.
"We need something really attractive to engage the gangs and the street kids," the Justice Department's administrator was quoted as saying. "Golf is the hook."
Dozens of other effective programs were denied. Many grants were disbursed via affirmative action for friends of the administration, the domestic equivalent of handing out no-bid work to firms for "Iraqi reconstruction".
It was still more proof that politicians have neither a clue nor a care as to how to really address the needs of young Americans.
The team at Northeastern University's Center for Labor Market Studies has been trying to call attention to the historic rise in youth joblessless. But in a recent shocking, but sadly not-yet-influential report, they posed the question right in the title: "Does Anybody Care?" The issue has not been raised in any of the presidential debates.
But the Center's researchers say the developing trend represents nothing less than "the collapse of the teen job market." They sketch the problem in starkest terms for youth of color. Even the poorest white teens are more likely to find work than the wealthiest Black teens. Wealthy white teens are two and a half times more likely to be employed than the poorest Black teens, whose employment rate was merely 18.9% last summer.
They write, "Low income, Black and Hispanic teens face the equivalent of a Great Depression."
Bob Herbert from the New York Times outlined the consequences in a recent editorial:
There are four million or more of these so-called disconnected youths across the country. They hang out on street corners in cities large and small -- and increasingly in suburban and rural areas.
If you ask how they survive from day to day, the most likely response is: "I hustle," which could mean anything from giving haircuts in a basement to washing a neighbor's car to running the occasional errand.
Or it could mean petty thievery or drug dealing or prostitution or worse.
To the hip-hop generation--and the authorities charged with containing it--this is all hardly news.
Violent crime rates, which have taken disturbing leaps in some inner cities over the past few years, tend to rise during the summer. Idle hands are the devil's tools. But this is an extreme--and simplistic--way to understand a deep problem.
Experts make an economic argument. Idled hands mean less productivity for the nation. Idled minds mean decreased competitiveness in the global economy now and in the future.
There is another argument: youths who want work and cannot find it are being sent the wrong message. Is this a country that really respects hard work if it places no value on creating work?
Indeed, what message does this nation want to send its young?
John F. Kennedy famously implored a new generation not to ask what their country could do for them, but to ask what they could do for their country. In 1963, he followed up with a wide-ranging address outlining the nation's responsibility to its young. In it, he discussed the creation of the Peace Corps, a National Service Corps, and a youth jobs program. He said, "The future promise of any nation can be directly measured by the present prospects of its youth."
What does it mean that, almost a half century later, young Americans face record rates of joblessness?
Since the '60s, youth policy has less often been discussed in terms of harnessing energies, than in terms of suppressing problems. There has been a massive shift towards harsher criminal and juvenile justice policies. The stunning rise in youth joblessness is a symptom of a larger national neglect, a neglect that is interrupted only by--ironic at best, disingenuous at worst--episodes of hand-wringing over young people's corruptibility and directionlessness. Punishment, it seems, has been the only coherent national youth policy since Kennedy.
Senator McCain, perhaps unsurprisingly, has been mostly silent on these issues, save vows to clean up the student loan mess. But even Senator Obama, who has clearly benefited by the enthusiasm of the young and who understands perhaps better than any politician youths' skepticism toward politics, has not yet outlined a place for them in his vision of America.
He supports focusing closely on job development and student achievement in 20 impoverished areas, what he calls "Promise Neighborhoods." More intriguingly, he backs a program of green-collar jobs for inner-city youths first pioneered by hip-hop activists in the Bay Area. But even these worthy programs are hardly more than a drop in the bucket, and don't by themselves add up to anything close to a national youth policy.
Senator Obama knows that the creative energies of young people can never be underestimated. In his interview with Vibe last year, he noted that hip-hop is a vast make-work project, a way of harnessing and channeling vast energies of young people. (This is partly why the up-by-the-bootstraps mythology--a narrative easily twisted into a celebration of consumerism that demagogues are then quick to criticize--has become so deeply interwoven into hip-hop culture.) But how could hip-hop be enough to reverse Great Depression-sized problems?
After four decades of the politics of abandonment and containment, now is the time for the presidential candidates to recognize young Americans are more than just a vote to be courted through late-night TV, more than a wellspring of videos, posters, music, and art, more than just an enthusiastic rally crowd.
Inspiration has been good, hope has been good, but both are not good enough.
The candidates must put young America to work, and involve the rest of us in taking full measure of the future promise of our nation.
Jeff Chang is the author of an award-winning Can't Stop Won't Stop: A History of the Hip Hop Generation and most recently Total Chaos: The Art and Aesthetics of Hip Hop.


Missing three major factors
Posted by: erkyl on Jun 19, 2008 8:10 AM
While I agree, politicians do little to help the plight of the unemployed teen, the author misses several contributing factors affecting teen employment: illegal immigration, parental and societal influences.Illegal Immigration
Experts agree that, in many cases, illegal immigrants are taking jobs teens would have previously done. Even leaving the traditional suburbian job of lawn mowing out of the equation, inner city youth don't have the same opportunities to work in restaurants and in light manual labor jobs, because many employers continue to hire low-wage illegals. The best thing the government can do is to truly enforce current laws on the books or to raise the spectre of serious penalties if caught so employers will look to the legal market of our own youth, instead of saving the quick buck to employ someone who will work for less than minimum wage.
Parents
More government programs, more money, more lip service to the situation isn't the answer. Parents are also part of the solution. Kids need to have a parent kick them in the butt to get out there and look for a job. As a high school teacher and with two teens of my own, I can tell you first hand that many kids aren't working today because they can't find a job that they like--not that they can't find a job at all. A lot of teens don't want to do certain jobs because they are too hard, or they might have to work weekends and interrupt their social lives, or they wouldn't be caught dead in that uniform. I overheard a hiring manager of a retail discount store talking on the phone saying he was offering a job to a worker at $7 an hour to unload the stock off the trucks, and the guy said he wasn't sure he wanted to do that kind of work and he'd get back to him! I know a lot of kids don't have parents to kick them in the butt, so who is ultimately responsible?
Societal Influcences on Teens
Please don't forget the personal responsibility factor in your equation. Too many young people today are looking for the easy way out. They think they're all going to be hip hop stars or pro athletes or movie stars or famous comedians. Of those unemployed teens, how many of them actually really looked for work, turned down offers they didn't want to do or didn't pay enough, or gave up after applying for 2 or 3 jobs? I have rarely had a job drop in my lap without even looking, and it seems like what you are expecting the government to do is to knock on the doors of America's youth and hand them a job that they'll find suitable. Teachers struggle to get kids to even turn in homework and pass high school, and you blame the government for not giving them enough opportunity? How many of them are blowing the opportunity they have in their school? I can answer that question.... far too many.
The government needs to do its part to keep minimum wage jobs open and available for teens to get valuable work experiece, and that means prosecuting employers who hire illegal immigrants. Parents need to do their part to lead and mentor their kids into the values necessary for a productive working life. But, ultimately, the kids themselves are responsible for seeing to it that they find gainful employment. They might not think the job is glamorous or pays much, but they need to start somewhere to get some experience. Do anything. Wash dishes. Take out the trash. Dig weeds. Do the grunt work somewhere, and the easier jobs come later. It's a paradigm shift for some kids, who have been raised in a world where everything is served up so fast and seemingly without much effort. Fast food, microwaves, blazing fast internet, millions of tv channels, all available at the push of a button. This generation really hasn't had to learn the benefit of working hard to get rewarded LATER. If they don't step up, they will have no one to blame but themselves.