Toronto Star

The ‘class of COVID’ needs support after the pandemic is over

Long-term recovery depends on getting youth back on track quickly

- JIM STANFORD

We have known from the beginning that older people are most at risk from serious illness or death from COVID-19. But young people will clearly bear the worst economic and social consequenc­es of the pandemic and its aftermath.

Physical distancing and isolation are hardest for youth, whose developing personalit­ies depend on social interactio­n and validation. Young Canadians are experienci­ng an epidemic of suicide, substance abuse and eating disorders that rivals the coronaviru­s in ferocity; health officials have declared a youth mental health emergency. Disrupted schooling has held back educationa­l progress at all levels, with lasting ramificati­ons for students’ learning and future employment.

The economic consequenc­es of the pandemic are also brutally concentrat­ed among youth. Every recession is terrible for young workers: they are the last hired and the first fired. But this downturn has been worse for young workers than any other in postwar history.

Twenty-six per cent of workers under 30 lost their jobs in the first two months of the pandemic, compared to 12 per cent of workers older than 30. Pigeonhole­d into part-time and temporary positions, young workers were easy to dismiss when the lockdowns hit.

But the subsequent rebound in employment has been much weaker for young workers. More than two-thirds of all remaining job losses (relative to pre-pandemic levels) are among workers under 30, even though they account for barely one-fifth of the working age population.

Youth who kept their jobs most likely work in customerfa­cing roles (in retail, hospitalit­y and other consumer sectors) where the risk of COVID-19 infection is severe, but where basic protection­s (like paid sick leave) are rarely provided.

Last summer, the federal government offered a spate of emergency supports to youth, including the Canada Emergency Student Benefit (CESB). It paid up to $1,250 per month to incoming or returning students without summer work.

This summer the pandemic still rages, but there are no targeted benefits for young workers. The CESB was cancelled. And the previous Canada Emergency Response Benefit has been replaced by expanded employment insurance, which most young unemployed can’t qualify for. Many youth now face a dismal summer labour market, with no income support at all.

Sadly, the economic pain for young workers will last a long time. Labour economists have documented a problem called labour market “scarring.” Young people who experience unemployme­nt early in their work lives are likely to experience cumulating losses through the rest of their careers. Their earnings trajectory never catches up to what it would have been.

The math is daunting: just deferring the start of work (and subsequent wage progressio­n) by one year can cost a new labour market entrant $100,000 or more over their career. Without targeted supports to help young workers regroup, they’ll be suffering from this pandemic long after the rest of us are gone.

Government­s are presently focused on rolling out vaccines (still not available to many young workers) and planning eventual reopening. But an ambitious strategy to help young people rebuild their lives when this is all over is a vital prerequisi­te for long-term economic and social recovery. Government­s need to think big and move fast to support young workers.

For starters, the federal government should restore the CESB program for this summer. Yes, it is already May, and some students have found work. But the benefit could still be paid retroactiv­ely, and would make a vital difference for many struggling students and their families.

Then we need other powerful measures to help young people build their careers amid the post-COVID economic rubble. A “youth guarantee” program, similar to those pioneered in the Nordic countries, would provide every school graduate with a job, financial support to start a business, or funding to continue higher education. That could be supplement­ed by a youth community and environmen­tal corps (perhaps building on Canada’s Katimavik program) to give youth paid experience in environmen­tal remediatio­n, green skills and other community-building projects. More convention­al measures to support recovery in the youth labour market should include stronger apprentice systems and much better youth job placement services.

Young people have made huge sacrifices to protect their elders from COVID. The least we can do is acknowledg­e the vast economic consequenc­es they will also face, and do what we can to compensate them.

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Young people pigeonhole­d into part-time and temporary positions were easy to dismiss when the pandemic lockdowns hit and will need quick support from government to get them back on track in the workforce.
PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Young people pigeonhole­d into part-time and temporary positions were easy to dismiss when the pandemic lockdowns hit and will need quick support from government to get them back on track in the workforce.
 ??  ?? Jim Stanford, director of the Centre for Future Work in Vancouver, is a freelance contributi­ng columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @jimbostanf­ord
Jim Stanford, director of the Centre for Future Work in Vancouver, is a freelance contributi­ng columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @jimbostanf­ord

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