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4 out of every 10 people under 25 in Ireland are unemployed according to 2011 census

Unemployment in Ireland nearly doubled between 2006 and 2011


Dole quoue in Dublin city center
Dole quoue in Dublin city center
Photo by Google Images

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New figures released on Thursday by Ireland’s Central Statistics Office from the 2011 census show that a staggering 40 percent of people under 25 years old were unemployed at the time of the census.

The Irish Times reports on the CSO’s findings, derived from last year’s census. It was determined that in April 2011, more than 82,000 people between the ages of 15 and 24 were not working.

The 82,000 so-called ‘youths’ unemployed at the time of the census showed a sharp 74 percent increase in the rate of youth unemployment between the 2006 and 2011 censuses.

The census showed that of the 82,000 unemployed last year, nearly 70,000 had completed their education. Variations according to education level, however, were evident. The largest variation came, of course, between the 70 percent unemployed who only had a primary education, and the much smaller 18 percent who had completed third level education.

The overall unemployment rate more than doubled from 8.5 percent in 2006 to 19 percent in 2011, presumably as a result of the end of the Celtic Tiger era in Ireland.

Donegal and Limerick City proved to have the highest percentage of unemployment with around 50 percent each. Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown had the lowest youth unemployment rate with 27 percent, with Fingal, Co Cork and Galway City having similar rates.

The rate of unemployment among foreign nationals in 2011 stood at 22 percent, a higher rate when compared with the unemployment rate of 18.5 per cent among Irish people. Accordingly, those who spoke English had a lower rate of unemployment than those who had an inferior ability or no ability to speak English.

Combined with people looking for their first job, the total number out of work stood at 424,843 in April 2011.
 


Nster.com


11 Comments

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3 out of 10 people born in the republic of ireland aged between 18 and 62 are either working, living or studying in UK - We are one People Great British and proud.
Left outside to queue in the rain. A further strategic deterrent to potential applicants? Were the Maple 10 left queueing to get personal loans of €160m from ex-Anglo-Irish Bank, or is that only a peculiar provilege for those on €160 p/w. Were a former Irish political elite left queueing for Beverly Flynn's National Irish Bank (NIB) revenue neutral Caymen Island investments, putting their money where their patriotism was. 15% unemployment. 20% immigration. Nationals may be being displaced by foreign language students working part-time. Foreign workers are exempted from the protection of Irish labour law, being paid rates of pay of their country of origin. Native unemployment will drop when Irish workers are willing to undercut their immigrant competitors. To paraphrase a well know Irish saying - profits are thicker than nationality!
Send them all to Russia that will put manners on them lets see what happens to them when they fall around drunk in Moscow lol
... Races !
A Day at the R
I echo Wounded Knee's sentiment 100%! I've heard about thousands of especially Third World "refugees" going to Ireland in droves. Are they taking jobs that most Irish refuse to do or what? Hope that Ireland isn't overrun as America has been, I don't think Ireland can afford to educate and subsidize too many newcomers. Best of luck on that, especially to the folk of Limerick. Hang in there!
The ones that I saw, yes, most all I spoke to liked him. I told them I'd be happy to send him over for keeps. (His visit was two weeks later.)
And they would still vote for obama?
May of last year I stayed at a Lodge in Ballinasloe for ten days keeping it as the base of my travels. I was so impressed at the professionalism of their wait staff, none of whom were over 25. All were Irish and lived close. I can't say the same for the taxi drivers though.
in the Republic of Ireland you mean - unemployment in Northern Ireland is half the figure in the Republic, inline with the UK unemployment figures
This once more confirms something that has been evident for a decade--the Madness of Mass Immigration to Ireland. 40% of her young people can't find work, yet every week thousands of foreign migrants and settlers throng into Dublin Airport. It's ethnosuicide.
 




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