USA TODAY Full-Page Ad Highlights Unemployment Crisis Among Minority Teens

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Thu Jun 19, 2008 9:00am EDT

African-American Teen Unemployment at 32.3 Percent Is Six Times the National
Average; Teen Summer Job Climate Worst Since World War II

WASHINGTON, June 19 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Today the Employment Policies
Institute (EPI) drew attention to the teen employment drought with a full-page
advertisement in the USA TODAY. The ad raises the issue of minority teen
unemployment, calling it the biggest crisis currently facing this population
group.

The ad reads as follows:

The Biggest Minority Teen Crisis?  

-- Pregnancy

-- Smoking

-- Unemployment

"Sadly, African-American teen unemployment is nearly six times the national
average and almost twice that of teens in general.  Find out more about what's
preventing teens from finding work and what it means for their future at
www.minimumwage.com."

The national unemployment rate jumped to 5.5 percent in May from 5 percent in
April driven in large part by the 3.3 percentage point jump in teen
unemployment.  Researchers at Northeastern University, who described summer
2007 as "the worst in post-World War II history" for teen summer employment,
recently concluded that 2008 is poised to be "even worse."   

One of the prime reasons for this drastic employment drought is the mandated
wage hikes that policy makers have adopted in an already difficult business
environment.  Economic research confirms that increasing the minimum wage
destroys jobs for low-skilled workers while doing little to address poverty. 
According to economist David Neumark of the University of California at
Irvine, for every 10 percent increase in the minimum wage, employment for high
school dropouts and young black adults and teenagers falls by 8.5 percent.  In
the 14 months between June 2007, and August 2008, the United States minimum
wage will have increased nearly three times that amount.

"Decades of economic research clearly demonstrate that minimum wage hikes
result in job loss for the most vulnerable members of society," said Rick
Berman, Executive Director of the Employment Policies Institute. "The
unintended consequence of the federal minimum wage hike is pricing some
employees out of the workforce, and based on the recent unemployment data,
it's teens - minority teens especially - who are getting hit the hardest."

"A summer job for a teen is much more than a paycheck: It's a chance to gain
important skills and learn the invisible curriculum that comes from being
employed. Unfortunately many teens won't have that opportunity this summer
thanks to legislators who elected to embrace populist sound bites instead of
sound economics," Berman concluded.  

You can view the entire ad at www.epionline.org. 

The Employment Policies Institute is a nonprofit research organization
dedicated to studying public policy issues surrounding entry-level employment.
 For additional information or to schedule an interview with a spokesperson
call Tim Miller at 202.463.7650.


SOURCE  Employment Policies Institute

Tim Miller of the Employment Policies Institute, +1-202-463-7650
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