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Jobs For Teens Soar In June As Economy Reopens, But Fewest Teens Working Since 2010

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9월 6, 2021
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from Challenger Gray and Christmas

The number of jobs added for workers aged 16 to 19 soared in June to 1,129,000, the highest June total in over two decades, according to the latest employment data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). This after 594,000 jobs were gained in May, according to an analysis of non-seasonally adjusted data from the BLS by global outplacement and executive and business coaching firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc.

The 1,723,000 jobs added in May and June is a 36% jump from the 1,269,000 jobs added for teens in those two months last year. Teen hiring is on track to reach levels not seen since 1999, when 2,017,000 jobs were added.

“This is great news for teens who want to get back to work. The current data suggests many of the jobs returning to the economy due to reopenings are going to teen workers,” said Andrew Challenger, Senior Vice President of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc.

Despite the huge jump in the number of jobs added, 4,884,000 teens were employed in June, the lowest number of employed teens in the month of June since 2010, when 4,833,000 teens were employed. Last June, 5,941,000 teens were employed, before hitting the peak employment number of 6,409,000 in July. In 1999, 7,900,000 teens were employed in June.

Meanwhile, the unemployment rate for teens was 24.5% in June, according to non-seasonally adjusted data from the BLS. This is up nearly ten points from the 15% unemployment teens experienced in June 2019. In April, the unemployment rate eclipsed the participation rate for teens, the first time this has happened in the series.

Source: Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc. with non-seasonally adjusted data

from the Bureau of Labor Statistics

“The rise in COVID cases the nation is currently experiencing is impacting all workers, not just teens, but it is clear that teens are also slow to get back to work. The new risks that come with these jobs are likely keeping many teens from working, and establishments that primarily employ teens may scale back reopening as cases continue to emerge,” said Challenger.

“We’re not seeing the numbers of employed teens we saw last summer, which was one of the best teen job markets since 2001,” added Challenger.

In fact, 7,600,000 teens were employed in June 2001, reaching 8,900,000 employed teens in July of that year.

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT GROWTH AMONG WORKERS AGED 16 TO 19

Year

May

June

July

Summer Jobs Gained

Change from Prior Year

1998

270,000

1,058,000

675,000

2,003,000

1999

415,000

750,000

852,000

2,017,000

0.70%

2000

111,000

1,087,000

311,000

1,509,000

-25.20%

2001

58,000

1,124,000

560,000

1,742,000

15.40%

2002

161,000

985,000

510,000

1,656,000

-4.90%

2003

152,000

859,000

458,000

1,469,000

-11.30%

2004

168,000

827,000

597,000

1,592,000

8.40%

2005

183,000

1,007,000

546,000

1,736,000

9.00%

2006

230,000

1,033,000

471,000

1,734,000

-0.10%

2007

62,000

1,114,000

459,000

1,635,000

-5.70%

2008

116,000

683,000

355,000

1,154,000

-29.40%

2009

111,000

698,000

354,000

1,163,000

0.80%

2010

6,000

497,000

457,000

960,000

-17.50%

2011

71,000

714,000

302,000

1,087,000

13.20%

2012

157,000

858,000

382,000

1,397,000

28.50%

2013

215,000

779,000

361,000

1,355,000

-3.00%

2014

217,000

661,000

419,000

1,297,000

-4.30%

2015

182,000

609,000

369,000

1,160,000

-10.60%

2016

156,000

691,000

492,000

1,339,000

15.40%

2017

75,000

1,023,000

190,000

1,288,000

-3.80%

2018

130,000

951,000

307,000

1,388,000

7.80%

2019

216,000

1,053,000

468,000

1,737,000

25.10%

2020

594,000

1,129,000

1,723,000

AVERAGE Since 1998

176,348

877,826

449,773

1,473,545

AVERAGE Since 2006

169,200

835,677

389,052

1,368,159

Source: Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc., with non-seasonally adjusted data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

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