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"ONE OUT of FIVE"
 
A Report on Out-of-School & Out-of-Work Youth in Los Angeles and Long Beach

A critical new study shows that Los Angeles teens, ages 16-19, lack early work experience than their peers in the state and nation. The study, "The Teen Disconnection in Los Angeles", paints a dramatic picture of Los Angeles youth, particularly from South and East Los Angeles, having less exposure to jobs and lack early work experience. Early work experience is considered necessary to gain early development of workplace "soft skills" needed to compete and succeed in the workplace. This disconnection from work compounds the problem of low high school completion rates documented recently by this study and others on Los Angeles area youth and education. According to the report, "Over 25,000 Los Angeles teens are not enrolled in school programs and are not in the workforce."

Below are links to download a full report version of "The Teen Disconnection in Los Angeles," as well as full set of maps of this problem within Los Angeles neighborhoods.

Education and employment among young adults should be a vital part of workforce development strategies. It is important to understand the extent to which young adults participate in these activities and identify subgroups of young adults who fail to acquire formal education or to access employment. The Workforce Investment Boards of the cities of Los Angeles and Long Beach commissioned this study in partnership with the U.S. Conference of Mayors. Paul Harrington, the Associate Director of the Center for Labor Market Studies, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, is the principal researcher of this study.

In this report, a thorough analysis is presented of the educational and employment activities of young adult residents of Los Angeles County including the cities of Los Angeles and Long Beach, and the remainder of Los Angeles County which includes the suburban communities surrounding these two cities. Also presented is a comparison of the educational and employment behaviors of young adult residents of these areas with that of their counterparts in the state and the nation.

The ages between 16 and 24-young adulthood-is typically the time to accumulate human capital in the form of educational attainment or work experience in the labor market. Individuals undertake these activities during young adulthood since the opportunity cost, particularly of seeking education, is lower during this period of their lives when they have not yet started a family and are therefore free from the responsibilities of supporting a family.

The value of human capital has increased sharply as the job content of the economy has changed in favor of jobs that require higher levels of formal educational attainment and more sophisticated skills. Education has become a prerequisite to success in today's labor markets. The changes that have occurred in the labor markets make it imperative that young adults engage in acquiring skills and human capital through formal education and labor market work experience. In today's labor markets, what workers "reap" over their working lives is even more strongly determined by what they "sow" during the young adult years of their lives. When young adults work or go to school, the benefits extend beyond their personal lives to the economy and the society at large.

Most of the analysis in this report is based on data from the 2000 decennial census, which provides information on the activities of individuals at the time of the census enumeration in the spring of 2000. The deterioration of the labor market after the 2001 recession and its impacts on youth employment and youth labor market problems are captured with data from the Current Population Survey (CPS) for 2000 and 2003.

Hard copy documents are also available by calling 213-744-7130, or at:

CDD 6th Floor Reception Area
1200 West 7th Street, Los Angeles, CA 90017

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