Wednesday, August 12, 2009

How To Control Tech Decks

the lost generation of young Englishmen

Cola to enter into an employment office in the city British Bromley (Kent).


More than one million children under age 24 can not find work, the highest figure in 15 years

The rise in unemployment among young Britons to levels not seen in the last fourteen years threatens to quit Britain with a new "lost generation." According to recent data today, which analysts say openly of "horrible" job crisis facing the country, following the recession that have suffered most islands in the last half century, has boosted the number of children under 24 years without working above the altitude psychological million. A breakthrough that brings the total number of unemployed on the 2.4 million at the end of the second quarter and increases the unemployment rate to 7.8%, also previously unpublished figures from 1995.

With one in six young unemployed, analysts and unions have expressed concern that the lack of work is discouraging to thousands of students who finish their careers and watch helplessly as there is no way of finding work . One factor, they warn, may erode further aroused little enthusiasm for higher education among British youth, who runs a school dropout rates highest in Europe, and threatens to weigh down the country's future. According

Brendan Barber, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress (TUC, for its acronym in English), "the government should do more of what you do to regain employment, because otherwise we run the risk of losing another generation of youth unemployment. "

addition to the strong rise of the youth can not find work, data released today by the British authorities show other signs for reflection, as the increase in 24,900 persons of the beneficiaries of unemployment benefits, bringing the total of them amounts to 1,580,000. The worst thing for over 12 years, it will aggravate the already delicate State accounts, which before this rally and expected to end 2009 with a deficit of 10% of its GDP.

From Downing Street, the Business Minister, Peter Mandelson, who heads an interim government for the rental of Prime Minister Gordon Brown has acknowledged that unemployment has reached levels "unacceptable."

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