Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Youth Unemployment: Are we Becoming Europe?
Youth Unemployment: Are we Becoming Europe?
Dec 13, 2025 5:04 PM

Alejandro Chafuen, president and chief executive officer of the Atlas Economic Research Foundation and board member of the Acton Institute, recently wrote a piece for discussing youth unemployment in the United States. According to the latest report, U.S. youth unemployment is at 16.2 percent which is more than double the adult unemployment rate. The unemployment rate for youth in Europe is currently at 24 percent. Chafuen asks, “Can we learn from the European experience?”

Using piled by the economic freedom indices of the Fraser Institute in Canada, and the Heritage Foundation, in the United States, we recently looked at how economic freedom, labor regulations, social spending, and regulatory climate, correlated with youth unemployment. Against our preconceptions, at least as shown with our simple static analysis, there were no convincing results. I will spare the reader the statistical jargon and graphs and focus on apparent contradictions.

Economic Freedom:

Denmark, first in economic freedom in Europe in the Heritage index, has a youth unemployment of over 14%, much more than Austria (8%) and Germany (7.5%), ranking lower in economic freedom. Sweden, which has asimilar scoreto that ofGermany and Austria, has a youth unemployment of over 20%.

Labor Regulations:

Using the Fraser Institute data, which shows very little divergence in EU labor regulations by country, we still see some that have similar scores, but thathave huge differences in youth unemployment: Spain, which has over 50% and Norway with 9%. The measurements for labor freedom in the Heritage index show much more divergence among European countries. Two of the worst in terms oflabor freedoms (Germany and Norway), have two of the lowest levels of youth unemployment, almost a third of the EU average. Spain is ranked better than Germany and Norway, yet its rate of youth unemployment is as mentioned, 50%.

Social Spending:

What about the welfare state? It is hard to find adequate data that would capture the structure, not just the amounts spent. As an approximate measure we used the global social spending in European countries. Some of the countries with thehighest social spending, like Austria, had some of the lowest rates of youth unemployment. Germany’s social spending is also above the EU average. Countries with the same level of social spending in relation to the size of their economies, like Poland and Norway, have huge differences in youth unemployment, near 8% in Norway, and over 25% in Poland.

Social factors:

During these last two decades family indicators and youth employment have been deteriorating, but it is hard to find adequate cause and effect explanations. Some measurements, like marriage rates, show that countries like Italy, Spain, and Portugal have lower rates than the European average. Those who are postponing marriage, might find it easier to move back home.

Chafuen concludes with this:

So far only 5 European countries (Austria, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Norway) have lower youth unemployment thandoes theU.S. Samuel Gregg, of the Acton Institute, who recently wrote ing Europe, warns that the U.S. is drifting towards the same policies thatgenerally leadto higher rates of joblessnes among the young. TheU.S. economy still scores better than most European countries in economic freedoms, but the trends are frightening. Without a reversal, the U.S. will look more like Europe. The youth will see their opportunities to earn a living dwindle, and work opportunitiesdelayed. Parents may want to ready spare bedrooms for the return of their offspring.

Read “Nosebleed Youth Unemployment: Will The U.S. Follow The Sclerotic Lead Of Europe?” here. You can find more information about ing Europehere.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Lord Acton and America’s Moral Absolutes Concerning Liberty
Lord Acton once said of the American revolution: “No people was so free as the insurgents, no government less oppressive than the government which they overthrew.” It was America’s high view of liberty and its ideas that cultivated this unprecedented freedom ripe for flourishing. Colonists railed over 1 and 2 percent tax rates and were willing to take up arms in a protracted and bloody conflict to secure independence and self-government. In a chapter on Lord Acton in The Moral...
Spirit-and-Body Economics
Over at the Kern Pastors Network, Greg Forster points to Rev. Robert Sirico’s speech from this year’s Acton University, drawing particularly on Sirico’s emphasis on Christian anthropology.“One may not say that we are spirits inside of flesh,” Sirico said, “but that we are spirits and flesh.” Forster summarizes: Christianity teaches that the human person is, in Sirico’s words, both corporeal and transcendent. We cannot make sense of ourselves if we are only bodies. How could a strictly material body think...
Disability and Discipleship: God Don’t Make No Junk
In this week’s Acton Commentary, “Disability, Service, and Stewardship,” I write, “Our service of others may or may not be recognized by the marketplace as something valuable or worth paying for. But each one of us has something to offer someone else. All of us have ministries of one kind or another. Our very existence itself must be seen as a blessing from God.” During a sermon a couple weeks ago at my church, the preacher made an important point...
What Distributists Get Wrong
Last week, we took a look at what distributists get right in terms of economics, through the eyes of David Deavel at Intercollegiate Review. Now, Deavel discusses where distributism goes off the rails in that same series. It is a rather long list, but here are the highlights. First, Deavel says that simple economics escapes distributists. Despite the fact that economics teaches that actions in the real world have real world consequences, distributists tend to ignore this fact. They scoff...
Do the Poor Vote for More Welfare?
A popular saying (often misattributed to Alexis de Tocqueville) states that a democracy can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. If this is always the case then we should expect the poor to vote themselves even more welfare payments. However, as Dwight R. Lee explains, the desire for transfers that others will pay for has almost no effect on people’s voting behavior: This argument that a significant financial gain from...
The Rise of Free-Market Alternatives to Obamacare
Referring to the Affordable Care Act, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Max Baucus (D-Mont.) stated earlier this year, “Unless we implement this properly, it’s going to be a train wreck.” And indeed, from looking at the Obamacare implementation timeline alone, the law seems to have gotten off to a shaky start. The implementation of the so-called employer mandate, which would require businesses with more than 50 workers to offer insurance to all full-time employees, or else pay a fine...
Bradley Cited in News Roundup on Millenials Leaving Church
Last week, Rachel Held Evans wrote an article discussing millennials leaving the church. This piece quickly went viral prompting responses from mentators, debating “why those belonging to the millennial generation are leaving the church and what should be done about it.” Research fellow at Acton, Anthony Bradley, discusses Evans’ piece in “United Methodists Wearing A Millennial Evangelical Face.” Jeff Schapiro, at the Christian Post, discusses this debate and summarizes mentators’ opinions, including Bradley’s: Anthony Bradley, associate professor of Theology and...
Dispersing Poor People And Crime
Emily Badger at The Atlantic Wire posts mon sense story regarding the debate about whether or not the dispersing of poor people out of inner-city housing projects into suburban neighborhoods, through government housing voucher programs, increases crime rates. The article reflects recent research by Michael Lens, an assistant professor of urban planning at UCLA. A growing stack of research now supports [the] hypothesis that housing vouchers do not in fact lead to crime. Lens has just added another study to...
Was Gordon Gekko Catholic?
Is greed really good? Does self-interest equal sin? Samuel Gregg takes on these questions at Aleteia.org, in an excerpt from his new book, Tea Party Catholic: the Catholic Case for Limited Government, a Free Economy and Human Flourishing. In many ways, the free economy does rely upon people pursuing their self-interest rather than being immediately focused upon promoting the wellbeing of others. One response to this challenge is to recognize that fallen humanity cannot realize perfect justice in this world....
For America’s Elites, Religious Freedom is a Non-Issue
America’s Founding Fathers considered religious liberty to be our “first freedom.” But as Ken Blackwell notes, that view is no longer shared by our media and foreign policy elites: All such understandings of the religious freedom foundation of American civil liberty and foreign policy seem long forgotten by the elites of today. The media cares little about religious freedom. The famous Rothman-Lichter study of 1981 surveyed 240 journalists from the prestige press. Of course, 80 percent of them voted one...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved