可视化欧洲飙升的青年失业率
Visualizing Europe's Soaring Youth Unemployment

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/visualizing-europes-soaring-youth-unemployment

截至2025年6月,欧洲在青年失业问题上面临显著分歧,欧盟范围内15至24岁人群的失业率存在巨大差异。虽然欧盟平均水平为14.8%,但各国情况极端,从马耳他的6.2%到爱沙尼亚的26.9%不等。 南欧国家——包括西班牙(24.0%)、意大利(20.1%)和希腊(18.8%)——尽管部分国家的整体经济有所增长,但其青年失业率始终处于最高水平。相比之下,德国、马耳他和荷兰等国凭借完善的职业培训体系和顺畅的从教育到就业的过渡,保持了较低的青年失业率。 这些差异是由劳动力市场监管、地区经济摩擦以及持续的技能错配等结构性因素造成的。尽管一些国家通过签证项目和人才引进计划来应对劳动力短缺问题,但其他国家仍受困于系统性障碍。这种不均衡的格局持续影响着人口迁移模式,越来越多的年轻劳动者为了寻求更好的职业前景和更稳健的劳动力市场,开始在欧洲大陆内部进行迁徙。

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原文

Breaking into the workforce looks very different depending on where you live in Europe. While some countries have relatively smooth transitions from education into employment, others continue to struggle with stubbornly high youth unemployment.

This visualization, created by DataPulse Research via Visual Capitalist, uses Eurostat data alongside additional analysis from DataPulse Research to compare unemployment rates among 15- to 24-year-olds across the EU in June 2025. Under Eurostat’s methodology, unemployed young people are those actively seeking work and available to start within two weeks.

Europe’s Youth Employment Divide

The table below ranks youth unemployment rates across EU member states in June 2025.

The spread is striking. Estonia’s 26.9% rate is more than four times Malta’s 6.2%, highlighting how dramatically employment prospects can differ across the bloc even as the EU-wide average remained steady at 14.8%.

Southern European countries continue to feature many of the highest rates of youth unemployment, with Spain (24.0%), Italy (20.1%), Portugal (18.9%), and Greece (18.8%) all posting elevated numbers. France also remained above the EU average at 18.7%, while Nordic economies presented a mixed picture, with Finland and Sweden ranking among the highest despite generally strong labor markets.

Why Are the Gaps So Large?

Youth unemployment reflects more than the health of an economy. Structural factors such as education-to-work transitions, labor market regulations, skills mismatches, and regional economic differences all influence how easily young people secure their first job. Research has long shown that these structural differences help explain why some European countries consistently experience higher unemployment than others.

Spain illustrates this complexity. Although the country continues to record one of Europe’s fastest-growing economies, youth unemployment remains among the continent’s highest, partly due to skill mismatches and regional labor market frictions.

At the same time, Spain has expanded pathways for international workers through new visa programs aimed at attracting talent in sectors facing labor shortages. Similar initiatives are appearing elsewhere in Europe as governments attempt to address demographic pressures and reduce hiring bottlenecks.

Why Some Countries Perform Better Than Others

Countries such as Germany (6.3%), Malta (6.2%), and the Netherlands (8.7%) have benefited from tighter labor markets, strong vocational training systems, and robust employer demand for apprentices and skilled workersThese economies have generally been more successful at connecting education with employment, reducing the time many young people spend searching for their first job.

The uneven outlook also helps explain broader migration trends across Europe, as workers often relocate in search of stronger employment opportunities, contributing to Europe’s shifting talent landscape.

To explore more global demographic and migration trends, check out Ranked: Countries With the Fastest Immigration Growth (2019–2024) on the Voronoi app.

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