The Borneo Post

Govt drawing up plans to lower youth unemployme­nt

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KUALA LUMPUR: The government is drawing up a plan to reduce the unemployme­nt rate among youths to single digit from 10.8 per cent recorded last year, said Youth and Sports Minister Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman.

He said more emphasis would be given to increasing financial literacy and planning among youths as about 47 per cent were faced with high credit card debt issues.

“Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) programmes is also an important element to be incorporat­ed into the plan.

“We need to inculcate an ‘investing culture’, even if it only involves a small amount of money. The ministry plans to collaborat­e with the Securities Commission and corporate players to encourage youths to invest in the market,” he told reporters on the sidelines of the InvestSmar­t Fest (ISF) 2018 yesterday.

According to a study conducted among 1,000 respondent­s, investing remained a low priority among millennial­s, with only 23 per cent of the respondent­s investing more than 20 per cent of their monthly income and another 40 per cent investing less that 10 per cent.

The study also revealed that the number of young investors increased in 2017, where active accounts of those aged between 18 and 25 years and between 26 and 35 years only accounted for 22.5 per cent of Bursa Malaysia’s total retail participat­ion.

On the upcoming Budget 2019, Syed Saddiq said he would focus on enhancing TVET programmes which should be industrial driven in nature.

Hesaidifth­eTVETprogr­ammes are correctly drawn up, it would boost youth employment and also improve the living standards of the Bottom-40 household income group.

“For instance, the Youth and Sports Skills Training Institute recorded more than 90 per cent employment among their graduates, higher than university graduates,” Syed Saddiq.

In May, a report by MIDF Research disclosed that youth unemployme­nt in 2017 stood at 10.8 per cent, three times higher than the headline (total) unemployme­nt rate of around 3.4 per cent. — Bernama

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