Friday, June 18, 2021

Summer Job Market for Teens Is Sweet

Share of working teens hits 13-year high, as more employers turn to young people to fill hiring gaps 

By Patrick Thomas of The WSJ

Possible reasons for the labor shortage (and hence the need for companies to hire teens) include enhanced federal unemployment benefits, continuing fear of contracting Covid-19 or lack of child care.

Excerpts:

"Young Americans are saving the summer.

Businesses are counting on teenage workers to staff restaurants, golf clubs, resorts and other hot-weather entertainment spots emerging from pandemic lockdowns. Many employers are struggling to find enough adult workers, and so to fill the gap, they are leaning on teens like never before and heavily courting them to keep businesses running in a busy summer.

For many young adults now flooding into the hot summer labor market, conditions are creating a job bonanza, complete with more accommodating bosses, greater schedule flexibility and even higher pay than in summers past.

Teens are answering the call to work. In May, the share of 16- to 19-year-olds who work rose to 33.2%, the highest rate since 2008, according to figures released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday. That teenage-employment rate is still far off the near-50% levels of the 1970s, when summer and part-time jobs were more common rites of passage into adulthood. But it marks a sharp rebound from the record-low 20% employment rate among teens in April 2020, shortly after the pandemic set in and dried up millions of lower-wage job opportunities.

Likewise, the unemployment rate for 16- to 19-year-olds dropped in May to 9.6% from 12.3% in April, its lowest level since 1953, according to the federal jobs data."

"Many of the businesses now facing labor shortages are big employers of teenagers to begin with. At the end of March, there were 1.2 million open jobs in the leisure and hospitality sectors and 734,000 open retail jobs. Last year, about 40% of working teens worked in leisure and hospitality, while retailers employed another 25%."

"Luke Pardue, an economist for Gusto, a payroll and benefits company with more than 100,000 small-business clients, says teens are often more willing to work for lower wages than older workers.

“We’ve seen a pent-up demand for tourism and recreation jobs where teens are most likely to be employed,” Mr. Pardue says. “Hesitancy among older workers, a higher demand for these types of jobs, could combine to make 2021 a record year for teen employment.”"


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I would agree that this is an economy for teens. They are also incentivized with Higher wages to the tune of $13 when minimum wage is like $7.25. Some places I have seen banners reading up to $18 an hour at places like McDonald's. Good time to be a teen on a summer job.