Question Period Note: Employment and Skills Support for Canada’s Youth
About
- Reference number:
- WAGE-2024-QP-007
- Date received:
- Jun 19, 2024
- Organization:
- Women and Gender Equality Canada
- Name of Minister:
- Ien, Marci (Hon.)
- Title of Minister:
- Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth
Issue/Question:
How is the Government of Canada supporting youth to gain the skills and experience they need to successfully enter the labour market?
Suggested Response:
•Many youth are struggling with affordability. About 30% of 15 to 24 years old report difficulty making ends meet.
•Good jobs open a world of possibilities for a better future. The Government is taking action.
•In 2023-2024 and 2024-2025, the Government will create over 130,000 opportunities per year through the Youth Employment and Skills Strategy Program, Canada Summer Jobs, and the Student Work Placement Program.
•Budget 2024 committed $558.8 million in additional funding for these programs in 2025-26.
•Through this announcement, the Government will continue to support 130,000 youth and students to gain skills and launch their careers next year.
Background:
•The Government has a mandate commitment to continue scaling up youth and student skills and employment programming and initiatives for Canadian youth. The main levers to deliver on this commitment are the Youth Employment and Skills Strategy (YESS), which includes the YESS Program and Canada Summer Jobs, and the Student Work Placement Program.
•Youth faced the greatest job loss during the pandemic. The overall unemployment rate for youth aged 15-24 peaked at 30% in May 2020.
•In response, the Government made historic investments to Canada’s Youth Employment and Skills Strategy to help youth, especially those facing barriers, to find and maintain good jobs.
•Employment has since improved, and Canada’s post-pandemic labour market shows a positive outlook for young Canadians in light of labour shortages. However, recent labour market trends show an increase in unemployment rates for youth and a decline in employment:
o In March 2024, the unemployment rate for youth (15 to 24) was 12.6%, an increase of 3.1 percentage points from a recent low of 9.5% observed in March 2023. In comparison, the unemployment rate for those over the age of 25 was 5.0% in March 2024.
o The youth unemployment rate in March 2024 was the highest since September 2016, excluding 2020 and 2021, during the pandemic.
•Many youth continue to need support, including those from under-represented groups (e.g., youth with disabilities, Indigenous youth, Black and other racialized youth groups, etc.). For example:
o In March 2024, the unemployment rate for Black youth aged 15-24 was 21.2%.
o In March 2024, the unemployment rate for visible minority youth aged 15-24 was 14.5%.
o In March 2024, the unemployment rate for Indigenous youth aged 15-24 was 16.8%.
•Youth are also facing socio-economic challenges. Reporting by Statistics Canada indicates that about 30% of 15 to 24 years old reported difficulty making ends meet and that youth are spending more of their income on housing than older age groups. It also indicates that Canadian youth are less satisfied and less hopeful about the future.
Youth Employment and Skills Strategy (YESS)
•The Youth Employment and Skills Strategy (YESS) is a horizontal initiative delivered in partnership by 12 federal departments, agencies, and Crown corporations. It supports youth between the ages of 15 and 30 to gain the work experience and develop the skills they need to successfully transition into the labour market. Through the YESS Program, the Government addresses gaps across several key sectors in the economy and supports diverse youth to achieve their employment goals.
•The ESDC YESS Program provides funding to organizations to deliver a range of activities that help youth to overcome barriers to employment. It includes a focus on those further from opportunity (e.g., those not in education, employment or training (NEET), underrepresented and disadvantaged youth).
•Canada Summer Jobs (CSJ) is delivered solely by Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC). The program supports employers to create quality summer jobs for youth in not-for-profit, public, and private sectors. It includes a focus on small businesses with 50 or fewer full-time employees. Canada Summer Jobs provides youth with opportunities to develop and improve their skills; for some, it is a first job experience that informs their future education, training, and career choices. The program is responsive to national and local priorities, as well as labour market needs.
•To advance the mandate commitment to create a stream for youth with disabilities under the YESS, stakeholder engagement was held in fall 2022. The Minister for Women and Gender Equality (WAGE) and Youth and the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of WAGE met with youth with disabilities, youth service providers and employers.
•Their advice was put into action in the recent ESDC YESS program Call for Proposals, launched in Fall 2023, which included a dedicated stream for projects serving youth with disabilities.
•The Government’s investment is delivering results for youth. For example, a mid-cycle assessment found that April 2020 to December 2022, 81% of ESDC YESS Program participants had returned to school or were in employment after participation.
•In 2022-2023, the YESS Program supported over 26,000 opportunities and CSJ supported over 115,000 jobs.
•In 2023-2024 and 2024-2025, the YESS Program will create 40,000 opportunities and CSJ will support 140,000 summer job placements.
•Budget 2024 proposed $351.2 million in additional funding for the YESS to help create over 90,000 youth job placements and support opportunities in 2025-26. These investments include:
o $150.7 million in 2025-2026 for the Youth Employment and Skills Strategy Program to provide job placements and employment supports to youth; and
o $200.5 million in 2025-2026, to Canada Summer Jobs to provide well-paying summer job opportunities, including in sectors facing critical labour shortages, such as housing construction.
•This funding aligns with levels announced in the 2022 Fall Economic Statement and will allow the YESS Program and the CSJ program to maintain targets that are consistent with previous years. It is anticipated that the YESS Program will support 20,000 opportunities annually in 2025-2026 and that CSJ 2025 will support 70,000 youth.
ESDC YESS Program Call for Proposal
•The 2023 Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) YESS Program Call for Proposals (CFP) will provide eligible organizations with over $300 million over four years to help improve labour market outcomes for up to 20,000 youth facing barriers to employment. CFP 2023 includes a new stream designed to address the unique barriers to employment encountered by youth with disabilities, with a target of supporting up to 20% of projects under this stream.
•Applications are being assessed and once funding decisions are made all applicants will be notified promptly.
Student Work Placement Program
Investment
•Budget 2024 proposes $207.6 million in 2025-2026 for the Student Work Placement Program (SWPP) to create more work-integrated learning opportunities for post-secondary students.
•Budget 2023 invested $197.7 million in 2024-2025 to the SWPP to continue creating quality work-integrated learning opportunities for students through partnerships between employers and post-secondary education institutions.
•The Program will support the creation of approximately 40,000 work-integrated learning opportunities per year until 2025-2026 for post-secondary students across various in-demand sectors.
•These measures will help students gain the necessary skills, education, and real-life work experience to transition successfully into the workforce.
Results
•Launched in 2017-2018 as a small-scale pilot, the SWPP has grown from offering 10,000 work-integrated learning opportunities over four years, to over 50,000 in 2022-2023.
•Between 2017-2018 and 2022-2023, the Program has supported over 190,000 work-integrated learning opportunities for post-secondary students across all provinces and territories as well as in all sectors of the Canadian economy. This total includes 138,073 work placements and 54,386 innovative work-integrated learning (I-WIL) opportunities.
Background
•SWPP supports partnerships between industry and post-secondary institutions to create quality work-integrated learning opportunities for students in all disciplines.
•SWPP helps post-secondary students to develop work-ready skills, employers to recruit and develop talent, and post-secondary institutions to adapt to changing labour market needs.
•For thousands of Canadian college, university, polytechnic, and CEGEP students, work-integrated learning programs help to bring together academic learning and applied work experience. These opportunities can include but are not limited to co-ops, internships or mentorship programs, as well as other non-traditional experiences like hackathons, boot camps, and micro-internships.
•The Program incentivizes employers through an enhanced wage subsidy to offer placements to students who have historically lacked access or experience barriers to participating in work-integrated learning opportunities. Under SWPP, under-represented groups refer to women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, Indigenous Peoples, persons with disabilities, newcomers and visible minorities.
•Under-represented groups may face intersecting barriers when in the workforce and the post-secondary education system. A study of WIL applications in Ontario found a lack of applicants from diverse groups. Only a third of WIL applicants identified as racialized (32.2%), a quarter (25.1%) identified as women, 9.3% of applicants identified as newcomers to Canada, 4.3% identified having a disability, and a very small minority, 0.2% of WIL applicants, identified as Indigenous (Toronto Metropolitan University, 2021).
Additional Information:
None