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University degrees offer lowest unemployment edge in Southern, Eastern Europe

Created at 1 Jul · 7:40 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

A university degree's advantage in the job market varies significantly across Europe. Central and Eastern European nations report near-zero graduate unemployment, while countries like Greece, North Macedonia, and Turkey face higher rates, impacting young people's career prospects.

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Key Numbers

1.5%graduate unemployment in Romania, Czech Republic, Poland, Bulgaria
7%graduate unemployment in North Macedonia, Turkey, Bosnia-Herzegovina
6%graduate unemployment in Greece
3.6%EU average graduate unemployment
4.7%graduate unemployment in France
5.7%graduate unemployment in Spain
3%graduate unemployment in Italy and Germany
9%overall unemployment in Spain (aged 25-54)
8.7%overall unemployment in Serbia (aged 25-54)
7.5%overall unemployment in Turkey (aged 25-54)
5.4%EU average unemployment (aged 25-54)
6.6%overall unemployment in Italy (aged 25-54)
6.1%overall unemployment in France (aged 25-54)
2.4%unemployment in Czech Republic (aged 25-54)
2.5%unemployment in Malta (aged 25-54)
2.7%unemployment in Poland (aged 25-54)
2.9%unemployment in Netherlands (aged 25-54)
4%unemployment in Germany (aged 25-54)
10%young EU citizens (15-29) who are NEETs
5%NEET rate in Netherlands
19%NEET rate in Romania
11%EU average NEET rate
13%NEET rate in Italy, Bulgaria, Greece
4%decrease in EU NEET rate over past decade
12ppNEET decrease in Italy
10ppNEET decrease in Greece
1.0 ppNEET increase in Germany
1.2 ppNEET increase in Luxembourg
1.6 ppNEET increase in Austria
12%female NEET rate
10%male NEET rate
12%NEET rate in rural areas

Who's Involved

Alessio Dell'Anna
Author of the article
Maud Zaba
Video producer
Euronews
News organization
Eurostat
Source of employment data
University degrees offer lowest unemployment edge in Southern, Eastern Europe

↳ Why This Matters

The value of a university degree in securing employment differs greatly by country, impacting career opportunities and economic stability for graduates across Europe. This disparity highlights regional economic differences and the varying effectiveness of higher education in preparing individuals for the workforce.

Key facts

  • Graduate unemployment is below 1.5% in Romania, Czech Republic, Poland, and Bulgaria.
  • Greece has the highest graduate unemployment rate in the EU at around 6%.
  • The EU average graduate unemployment rate is 3.6%.
  • Overall unemployment for those aged 25-54 is 5.4% in the EU, with Spain, Italy, and France above this.
  • Over 10% of young EU citizens (15-29) are classified as NEETs.
  • Romania has the highest NEET rate at 19%, while the Netherlands has the lowest at 5%.

A university degree's advantage in the job market varies significantly across Europe, with graduate unemployment rates ranging from near zero in some Central and Eastern European countries to around 7% in others.

Analysis of Eurostat employment data shows that in Romania, the Czech Republic, Poland, and Bulgaria, less than 1.5% of individuals aged 25 to 54 with tertiary education are unemployed. However, countries like North Macedonia, Turkey, and Bosnia-Herzegovina face graduate unemployment rates of approximately 7%. Within the European Union, Greece has the highest rate at about 6%.

Recent graduates in France and Spain also experience unemployment rates above the EU average of 3.6%, with figures around 4.7% and 5.7% respectively. Italy and Germany are closer to the EU average, with rates around 3% each.

Overall unemployment for the 25-54 age group across the EU stands at 5.4%. Spain, despite economic growth, has the bloc's highest unemployment rate at over 9%, followed by Serbia (8.7%) and Turkey (7.5%). Italy and France are also above the EU average, at 6.6% and 6.1% respectively. Conversely, the Czech Republic (2.4%), Malta (2.5%), Poland (2.7%), and the Netherlands (2.9%) maintain unemployment below 3%, with Germany under 4%.

The issue of young people not in education, employment, or training (NEETs) also shows considerable disparity. More than one in ten young EU citizens aged 15-29 are NEETs, with rates varying from 5% in the Netherlands to a high of 19% in Romania. Italy, Bulgaria, and Greece also report high NEET percentages, exceeding 13%. The EU average NEET rate has fallen by over 4% in the last decade, with significant decreases in Italy and Greece, though a slight increase was noted in Germany, Luxembourg, and Austria.

Frequently asked questions

Romania, the Czech Republic, Poland, and Bulgaria report the lowest graduate unemployment rates, with less than 1.5% of individuals aged 25-54 with tertiary education being unemployed.

Greece has the highest graduate unemployment rate within the EU, standing at approximately 6%.

The EU average unemployment rate for individuals aged 25-54 is 5.4%. For graduates specifically, the EU average unemployment rate is 3.6%.

NEET stands for 'not in education, employment, or training.' Romania has the highest NEET rate among young EU citizens (15-29) at 19%, while the Netherlands has the lowest at 5%.

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Cadence

How It Developed

Analysis of Eurostat data reveals varying graduate unemployment rates across Europe.
Central and Eastern European countries like Romania, Czech Republic, Poland, and Bulgaria have less than 1.5% graduate unemployment.
North Macedonia, Turkey, and Bosnia-Herzegovina report around 7% graduate unemployment.
Greece has the highest graduate unemployment rate within the EU at approximately 6%.
France and Spain also show graduate unemployment rates above the EU average of 3.6%.
Overall EU unemployment for those aged 25-54 averages 5.4%, with Spain, Italy, and France above this.
The Czech Republic, Malta, Poland, and the Netherlands have unemployment rates below 3% for the 25-54 age group.
Over 10% of young EU citizens (15-29) are NEETs (not in education, employment, or training).

Sources

T1
Where does a university degree give you the biggest edge?Euronews

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