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[Merged]Brexit stuff

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    Originally posted by Bee View Post

    Assuming that the youth unemployment rate it’s cultural must came from retarded ignorant sascretin mind.
    I hope the concepts aren't too hard for you.
    The Late Emancipation of Spanish Youth: Keys For Understanding
    Hard Brexit now!
    #prayfornodeal

    Comment


      Originally posted by sasguru View Post
      I hope the concepts aren't too hard for you.
      The Late Emancipation of Spanish Youth: Keys For Understanding
      The problem is, you read too much but you don't assimilate within a context.

      It's true that the youth emancipation is late in Spain could be cultural but this doesn’t have nothing to do with the youth unemployment.

      You have to check the unemployment rate in 2003 (the date of the study) and compare with today, you can see that they have a problem that needs to be solve, not only Spain and I feel sorry for the country who doesn’t realize this.

      Comment


        Originally posted by GB9 View Post
        This is the sascretinguru of multiple socks calling me a troll?

        And when did mince become thick?
        I guess it's all relative.

        Comment


          Originally posted by Bee View Post
          The problem is, you read too much but you don't assimilate within a context.

          It's true that the youth emancipation is late in Spain could be cultural but this doesn’t have nothing to do with the youth unemployment.

          You have to check the unemployment rate in 2003 (the date of the study) and compare with today, you can see that they have a problem that needs to be solve, not only Spain and I feel sorry for the country who doesn’t realize this.
          The unemployment rate at the time of writing (2003) is given in this quote, which suggests not much has changed:

          "Youth unemployment (under the age of 25) is a problem in the great majority of European countries. In the countries of the South, however, it reaches abnormal levels -in some parts of Southern Greece, Italy and Spain even higher than 50%"

          And one of the conclusions reached in the study is that because of the cultural factor of "familialism" and it's normalisation in the culture, all the institutions of the state in the Latin countries have a bias in employment towards older people with families.

          "The economic benefits of the mediterranean Welfare States are mainly focused on the elder collective and on the male breadwinners (Lewis, 2001). The collective of the young people in countries like Spain are forgotten by the Welfare State.

          A second common aspect is the marked familialism that characterizes the way the function in the field of both intervention and financing (Sgritta, 2001: 5). “The low degree of stateness of the Latin welfare system is one characteristic which isolates this family of nations from other present in Europe (Ferrera, 1995: 9)."


          In other words it's a vicious cycle: institutions/govt don't think youth unemployment is a major problem because the family will deal with it. Which causes the youth to stay with their families longer because they have no jobs.
          And so on.

          In the Northern countries where leaving home at 18 or early 20s is the norm, families don't really help kids that much (until the house price boom occurred) so providing jobs/training for youth is part of government policy
          Last edited by sasguru; 6 September 2016, 16:26.
          Hard Brexit now!
          #prayfornodeal

          Comment


            Originally posted by sasguru View Post
            One of the conclusions reached in the study is that because of the cultural factor of "familialism" and it's normalisation in the culture, all the institutions of the state in the Latin countries have a bias in employment towards older people with families.
            In other words it's a vicious cycle: institutions/govt don't think youth unemployment is a major problem because the family will deal with it. Which causes the youth to stay with their families longer because they have no jobs.
            And so on.
            In the Northern countries where leaving home at 18 or early 20s is the norm, families don't really help kids that much (until the house price boom occurred) so providing jobs/training for youth is part of government policy
            And yet despite the weight of this evidence, you feel an overwhelming need for the UK to remain as part of this failed experiment? You really do take boneheadedness to a new dimension.
            “The period of the disintegration of the European Union has begun. And the first vessel to have departed is Britain”

            Comment


              Originally posted by shaunbhoy View Post
              And yet despite the weight of this evidence, you feel an overwhelming need for the UK to remain as part of this failed experiment? You really do take boneheadedness to a new dimension.
              As a northern country, like half the EU, we don't have this issue (at least to as great a degree).
              It's a cultural/economic issue specific to Latin countries.
              What's your point?
              Hard Brexit now!
              #prayfornodeal

              Comment


                Originally posted by sasguru View Post
                As a northern country, like half the EU, we don't have this issue (at least to as great a degree).
                It's a cultural/economic issue specific to Latin countries.
                What's your point?
                The point is that as long as we are umbilically connected to that mess then we are going to be expected to financially subsidise it. No thanks.
                “The period of the disintegration of the European Union has begun. And the first vessel to have departed is Britain”

                Comment


                  Originally posted by sasguru View Post
                  What's your point?
                  No need to be cruel.

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by sasguru View Post
                    The unemployment rate at the time of writing (2003) is given in this quote, which suggests not much has changed:

                    "Youth unemployment (under the age of 25) is a problem in the great majority of European countries. In the countries of the South, however, it reaches abnormal levels -in some parts of Southern Greece, Italy and Spain even higher than 50%"

                    And one of the conclusions reached in the study is that because of the cultural factor of "familialism" and it's normalisation in the culture, all the institutions of the state in the Latin countries have a bias in employment towards older people with families.

                    "The economic benefits of the mediterranean Welfare States are mainly focused on the elder collective and on the male breadwinners (Lewis, 2001). The collective of the young people in countries like Spain are forgotten by the Welfare State.

                    A second common aspect is the marked familialism that characterizes the way the function in the field of both intervention and financing (Sgritta, 2001: 5). “The low degree of stateness of the Latin welfare system is one characteristic which isolates this family of nations from other present in Europe (Ferrera, 1995: 9)."


                    In other words it's a vicious cycle: institutions/govt don't think youth unemployment is a major problem because the family will deal with it. Which causes the youth to stay with their families longer because they have no jobs.
                    And so on.

                    In the Northern countries where leaving home at 18 or early 20s is the norm, families don't really help kids that much (until the house price boom occurred) so providing jobs/training for youth is part of government policy
                    I understand that. Again, this article is regarding the emancipation. They only count for the unemployment’s statists when they emancipated, usually after the university and start to search for the first job.
                    What it's happening is, they finish the school and can’t find a job, that's why they are in the statistics. It’s age independent.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by sasguru View Post
                      In other words it's a vicious cycle: institutions/govt don't think youth unemployment is a major problem because the family will deal with it. Which causes the youth to stay with their families longer because they have no jobs.
                      And so on.
                      Idiot conclusion from a bunch of bastards that don't know what they are talking about.
                      More idiots are who believe this nonsense.

                      Must be just to produce papers and reports...

                      Comment

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