Unemployment among young people
in Greece is running at 51.1%, the worst of any European country.
Another factor not widely known is that in Greece unemployment
benefit is only paid to those who have paid national insurance
contributions, and it only runs for one year and then it runs out and
you get no financial assistance, no free health care. Since more than
half of the young people have never had a job they are on their own,
relying on friends and family. This hardly measures up to the
accusation that the Greeks paid themselves too much for too long. A
lot of these young people are among the first in their family to go
to university, and their prize is unemployment. Today one in three
graduates in Greece is without work and among post graduates
unemployment has double.
Among these young people, and we
are talking about more than half the young population, there is
tremendous anger and frustration, and with that comes the looking for
answers, with revolution the main avenue being discussed. At this
moment in time there are approximately 20,000 homeless in Athens and
it is estimated that approximately 70 former government buildings in
the city are occupied and being used as squats.
Of
course the Greek state can’t do anything for these young people as
it is willingly under the control of the financial barons in
Brussels, whose only thought is the enrichment of their banking
system and the survival of their precious Euro dream, the human cost
is an irrelevance. We will all pay the same price as the young
Greeks, if the financial Mafia deem it necessary to further their
policies, and our government does, and will willingly continue to
submit to those policies.
Across Europe the
total unemployment rate is 10.7%, with youth unemployment running at
22.4%. That is over 24 million people unemployed, with youth paying a
disproportionate price in every country. The message is capitalism
isn’t working.
Country:
Total: Youth: Country: Total: Youth:
Hungary:
10.9% 27.3% Poland: 10.1% 27.5%
Bulgaria: 11.5%
28.9% Slovakia:
13.3% 36%
France: 9.9% 23.3% Italy:
8.9% 31.1%
Sweden:
8% 22.4% Britain: 8.7% 22.2%
Ireland:
14.8% 29.6% Portugal:
14.8% 35.1%
Spain: 23.3% 49.9% Greece: 29%
51.1%
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