The Youth Employment Strategy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Youth Employment Strategy

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YES is the government of Canada's commitment: ... Employers are funded to help post-secondary graduates get career related work ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Youth Employment Strategy


1
The Youth Employment Strategy
Communicating the Strategy
2
Youth Employment Strategy
  • YES is a key element of Canadas Innovation
    and Learning Strategy that will ensure that
    Canada has a highly qualified and skilled labour
    force prepared to meet the current and changing
    labour market needs.

3
Objectives
  • YES is the government of Canadas commitment
  • To help young people aged 15 to 30 particularly
    those facing barriers to employment, i.e. single
    parents, Aboriginal youths, young persons with
    disabilities, recent immigrants, youth living in
    rural and remote areas and high school dropouts,
    get information and gain the necessary skills and
    work experience to make successful transition to
    the workplace
  • To ensure Canada has a highly qualified and
    skilled labour force prepared to meet current and
    future about market needs

4
  • Delivered with Fourteen GOC Departments
  • HRDC (lead department)
  • Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
  • Canada Mortgage and Housing
  • Canadian Food Inspection Agency
  • Canadian Heritage
  • Canadian International Development Agency
  • Department of Foreign Affairs and International
    Trade
  • Environment Canada
  • Fisheries and Oceans Canada
  • Indian and Northern Affairs
  • Industry Canada
  • National Research Council
  • Natural Resources Canada
  • Parks Canada

5
Youth Population Developments
  • Canada has had a rebound in its youth population
    after a significant decline in
  • the 1980s.
  • During the 1990-2002 period, the number of youth
    aged 15-24 grew by 5.3
  • after a decline of 17.3 in the 1980s.
  • In the boom, bust and echo cycle these children
    are the echo. The increase is not
  • related to increased immigration but increased
    fertility rates.

Source Statistics Canada, Labour Force Survey
6
Labour Market Participation
  • Between 1990 and 1996, the youth labour force
    participation rate declined significantly.
  • A significant proportion of the decline could be
    attributed to the fall in the labour
  • force participation of students. Students
    became less attached to the labour
  • market in the 1990s because the prospects of
    finding work while in-school were
  • poor.
  • The other major factor was the continued growth
    in school enrolments. Youth
  • tended to postpone their entry into the labour
    market and stay in school longer.

Source Statistics Canada, Labour Force Survey
7
Labour Market Participation
  • Since 1997, increasingly available jobs have
    brought youth into the labour market.
  • The youth participation rate rose, as youth
    traded off between the future returns to getting
    an education to participate in todays
    knowledge-based economy and the immediate returns
    to entering the labour force at a lower skill
    level.

Source Statistics Canada, Labour Force Survey
8
Employment
  • Similar to participation rate trends, youth
    employment rates fell during the early- to mid-
    1990s and have since increased. The increase in
    youth employment can be attributed to an improved
    Canadian economy.

Source Statistics Canada, Labour Force Survey
9
Background
  • In ranking G8 youth unemployment rates Canada is
    ranked 5th lowest

Source OECD Labour Force Statistics
10
New Direction for YES
  • Three streamlined programs effective April 1,
    2003
  • Skills Link
  • Provides funding for community organizations to
    help youth facing barriers to employment develop
    the skills, knowledge and work experience to
    participate in the labour market.
  • Career Focus
  • Employers are funded to help post-secondary
    graduates get career related work experience and
    develop advanced skills.
  • Summer Work Experience
  • Provide wage subsidies that create summer
    employment for in-school youth returning to
    school. Support summer employment offices

11
Youth Initiatives Directorate
  • Youth Employment Initiatives continued
  • Information and Awareness
  • Information initiative allows for the development
    and dissemination of information services and
    tools for young Canadians including those facing
    barriers to better prepare them for the
    transition to the labour market, including
  • Youth Employment Information Web Site
    http//www.youth.gc.ca
  • Youth Info-Line
  • Youth Link and Employer Link publications
  • HRDC Youth Info Fairs

12
Features of Streamlined YES Programs
  • Client assessment / Case management
  • Return to work employment action plan developed
    to meet client needs
  • Individual skills enhancement
  • Increased community planning/ more effective
    partnering
  • Outreach

13
Features Of Strategy
  • Client-centered approach
  • Flexibility to meet individual needs
  • Responsive to labour market
  • Improved Accountability
  • Review 2008

14
Sample Projects
  • Official Language Minority Communities
  • A log home manufacturing company north of
    Montreal was contacted by the Community Economic
    Development and Employability Committee (CEDEC)
    serving the local English community in northern
    Quebec. The company submitted an application to
    the local HRCC for a youth work experience wage
    subsidy under Skills Link. Because the language
    regularly used in the workplace is English, the
    proposal specified an English speaking youth
    participant.
  • The 17 year-old participant completed a one-week
    workplace orientation and safety training before
    starting the six-month full-time work experience.
  • As a result, the participant was offered a
    full-time position based on her performance
    during the subsidized work placement and both the
    employer and the local minority language
    community retained an English speaking youth in a
    rural area of Québec.
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