Asia’s youth struggling to find good jobs, World Bank warns
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The World Bank noted that one in seven young people in China and Indonesia are unemployed.
PHOTO: AFP
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BANGKOK – Young people across Asia are struggling to find good jobs, with many stuck in low-productivity work that the World Bank warns could strain social stability as frustrations fuel a global wave of youth-led protests.
The bank highlighted a persistent gap between younger and more experienced workers across several Asian economies in a regional economic update released on Oct 7, noting that one in seven young people in China and Indonesia are unemployed.
It warned that the share of people now vulnerable to falling into poverty is now larger than the middle class in most countries.
“The employment rate is generally high, but the young struggle to find jobs,” the World Bank wrote in the regional economic update, adding that most people in Asia “who look for work find it”. However, “many individuals in the region are in low-productivity or informal jobs”.
Labour force participation remains low in Pacific nations and among women, with about a 15-percentage-point gap compared with men in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines, it said.
The report also found that much of the region’s job growth has shifted from manufacturing to low-wage services, eroding gains that once lifted millions out of poverty.
Governments across Africa and Asia have been grappling with a surge of Gen Z–led demonstrations in recent months, with thousands taking to the streets in the Philippines, Morocco, Madagascar, Indonesia, Timor-Leste, Kenya and Mongolia to protest against corruption, joblessness and widening inequality.
The protests, fuelled by anger over lavish displays of wealth by ruling elites, have targeted governments – toppling administrations in Nepal
A closer look at the numbers in Asia shows that the unemployment rate of those aged 15 to 24 is over 10 per cent in places like Mongolia, Indonesia and China, while the rate among workers aged 25 to 54 is 5 per cent or lower, World Bank data shows.
Firms that are five years old or less play an outsized role in job creation, according to the bank.
In Malaysia and Vietnam for example, they account for 57 per cent of total employment but contribute 79 per cent of job creation, and yet their role has been dampened because fewer new firms are entering markets, the report states.
Trade has boosted jobs in countries such as Cambodia and Vietnam, though gains remain uneven and vulnerable to global shocks, the report said.
“Countries are not fully realising the benefits of moving workers from less to more productive sectors and firms.” BLOOMBERG

