Overall, people between 20 and 34 outputs from training in occupied Italy in 2014 were just 45% against the 76% average in Europe, then back over thirty points higher than in the EU 28. In particular, the overall figure is far from the German (90%) and British (83.2%) but also from the French (75.2%).
Italy is late on employment of graduates (diplomas for non-professional recording just 30.5% of employees entitled to three years against 59.8% EU average and 67% in Germany) and on that of graduates. For tertiary education (from bachelor to doctorate) Italy is always located at the second lowest after Greece with 52.9% (93.1% in Germany).
For Italy there has been a slump in the employment rates after the title with the economic crisis and the close access to retirement who held the job the older age group. In particular, between 2008 and 2014 the average young employees entitled to three years in the European Union fell by eight points, from 82% to 76% while in Italy dropped by more than twenty points from 65.2% to 45%. In the same period in Germany the proportion has grown 86.5% to 90% while in France rose dall’83,1% to 75.2%. In the UK the percentage remained stable going from 83,6% to 83.2%.
In general, employment rates of graduates are higher than those of graduates (the latter are affected by the type of employability for graduates with higher professional titles) but Italy is in last place in the ranking in the percentage of young graduates. According to Eurostat statistics relating to 2014 on young people in the range between 30 and 34 Italians have the black shirt for tertiary education with just 23.9% of graduates compared with 37.9% of the EU average. The figure has improved from 19.2% in 2008 but less than they did on average the other EU countries (the percentage was 31.2% in 2008 and then rose by more than six points).
06/01/2016 14:07:22
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
| BECOME A FAN OF THE MESSENGER |
No comments:
Post a Comment