As of this week, 228,858 people will receive the Pandemic Unemployment Payment (PUP). Niamh Talbot explains how this has impacted job prospects for graduates.
Due to Covid-19, many college graduates are struggling to find work. Photo from Pixabay
Job hunting as a recent graduate always has its challenges but now even more so than ever. Youth unemployment now stands at 45% in Ireland, according to the latest CSO figures.
Last summer, around 60,000 final year college students went out into the workforce with hopes of finding their dream job. However, only 16% of graduates looking for their first job since March have been successful, with the new cohort of graduates from the summer set to hit ‘job hunt fatigue’ by Christmas, according to staffing business Walters People Ireland, who surveyed 1,500 Irish graduates.
The graduating class of 2020 have faced even tougher competition than previous years, with over one million people currently out of work and a huge drop in the number of roles available.
The City spoke to a recent journalism graduate, Ellen Kavanagh, who feels it’s harder than ever to find a job in the field you’ve studied in.
“Job-hunting in the midst of the pandemic is utterly bleak. There are so few positions available right now, and even less that I’m qualified for or have a genuine interest in,” she said.
Kavanagh also spoke about her difficulties with the current overcrowded job market, as someone with not much experience.
She said, “Within an hour of receiving a job alert on Linkedin, there are already 200 applicants. Competition is fierce and it really demotivates you. I’ve heard stories of people in recent months being let go of positions they’ve had for years that are now back on the job market. I’m competing with people with years of experience, knowledge, connections and industry practice. Most companies aren’t interested in your degree if you have no professional experience to accompany it.”
Kavanagh said the stress of job hunting has taken a huge toll on her mental health and that she feels as if she’s out of options.
“I’ve been told by many to take a job in a supermarket until the worst of the pandemic blows over. I have absolutely no qualms about working in retail, but it feels really depressing having studied for years to earn an honours degree only to apply for a job that doesn’t even slightly relate,” she explained.
“The worst part is that there’s no real escape. I can’t just emigrate and try my chances in another country. It’s really heartbreaking, to be honest. I know everyone is experiencing their own issues right now, but I really feel like recent graduates have drawn the short end of the stick. All I can do is continue to apply but it’s really hard not to feel hopeless right now.”
“All I can do is continue to apply but it’s really hard not to feel hopeless right now.”
Orla Moran, who is General Manager at IrishJobs.ie, said they have seen a 40% drop in the number of postings on the site since Covid-19 hit. Moran advises that young people should make the most of the free time they have available so they’re ready once they secure an interview.
“When you do get a job interview, future employers will be asking how you spent your time during the Covid-19 pandemic. They will want to hear that you spent the time volunteering or working on a project in your area of expertise, so I would suggest you try not to have big gaps on your CV for this period, even if you are out of work,” she said.
Holly Perry, a student recruitment associate, at one of the Big Four accounting firms, has been working hard to make things easier for recent graduates and gave similar advice.
She said, “Many companies are still recruiting, business is booming in some areas and we are continuously on the lookout for good talent. My advice for any grads searching for open positions is to keep positive and continue to upskill during your job hunt. This is so important right now with so much competition. When applying for a role make sure you tailor your CV and cover letter to the job spec and list out what skills you have to offer for that position.”
With the country moving to Level 5 restrictions, the unemployment rate is due to keep on rising. Does the government need to do more for our country’s graduates?
PRINT TRADE: The vast selection of local newspapers we recently found at John Hyland’s Dún Leary’s Last Corner Shop in Dún Laoghaire (Photo: Paul Caffrey)
As print sales continue to suffer in the era of smartphones, TheCity.ie’sPaul Caffrey reveals what it was like to endure a savage round of newsroom redundancies and examines the current state of the Irish newspaper industry
The newspaper business is in crisis and I’m living proof.
Last year was full of shocks for anyone working in newspapers, with 2019 characterised by one upsetting round of redundancies after another in the trade that was once king.
It was a long time coming. Sales and readership figures of printed papers have been in steady decline since 2007 as digital options — smartphones in particular — have developed more and more.
In the second half of 2018, sales of daily national papers in Ireland plummeted by 10%. The Sunday market fell by 9%. Behind the scenes, the executives trying to keep their ships afloat had to take out their balance sheets and work out how to make cuts. As usual, they went for payroll.
‘The Newspaper King’: A video by TheCity.ie
While investigating the current state of the newspaper business, we paid a visit to ‘Dún Leary’s Last Corner Shop’ in Dún Laoghaire, where newspapers of all kinds are still king. Bucking downward trends, owner John Hyland even sells a good selection of “yesterday’s papers”. He keeps the Sunday papers – and some dailies – in stock for at least a week. (Video: Paul Caffrey)
In March 2019, Ireland’s biggest newspaper group, Independent News & Media — publishers of the Irish Independent, Sunday Independent and The Herald — sought 35 redundancies. This led to the departures of many of its most talented and high-profile journalists.
Just a few months beforehand, in was described by SIPTU as a “massive blow”, INM had also shut down its own printing plant in Citywest, Dublin, with the loss of 84 jobs.
Until April of last year, I had a good job covering the High Court for a national newspaper.
On Friday, March 1st, I’d been in the middle of covering the closing stages of a libel action taken by billionaire Denis O’Brien against the Business Post — a case that could have bankrupted that paper had he won — when I was informed that my own employer was looking to remove about 35 of us from our jobs.
While one newspaper was standing up for its very existence in court with a full defence against O’Brien’s action by respected journalists Tom Lyons and Ian Kehoe, the Irish Daily Mail was about to lay off a large chunk of its loyal staff.
PRESS DEFENDER: Former Business Post journalist Tom Lyons, who now runs business website The Currency, was forced to defend his journalism from the witness box when brought to court by billionaire Denis O’Brien (Photo: YouTube)
I was in shock. My gut reaction was, how can we run a newspaper on that basis? What will become of my colleagues? And will I be staying? I loved working for them. But, with a verdict imminent in the O’Brien case, I had no choice but to get on with the job.
All the while, I was getting a flurry of texts from senior colleagues back at the newsroom, including one that assured us that our paper was not closing down. That statement in itself I found shocking, as my mind hadn’t yet contemplated any such eventuality.
The last thing you want when your own organisation is hit with a crisis like this is to have to discuss it with anyone outside of your number, unless you’ve known them a long time.
You just don’t want their commiserations or polite enquiries before you’ve had even 20 minutes to process it yourself – even if they work in the media.
And with O’Brien seemingly on the verge of yet another victory against a newspaper, it seemed that our industry was under attack from all sides.
The newspaper was vindicated for its journalism and for having dared to publish a story concerning the finances of a number of well-known businessmen including O’Brien.
PRESS VICTORY: Denis O’Brien lost his libel case on March 1, 2019 – the same day that yet another round of redundancies hit the print business (Photo: Paul Caffrey)
It was a genuine victory for press freedom and a boost for all of us working in the media. It temporarily gave us all a lift and a cause for celebration.
Emotions running high in the pouring rain outside the Four Courts. Tom Lyons, the paper’s former business editor, told the media:
“We stood up to him, we fought for a full month, we stuck to our guns, we told the truth, did the right thing and thankfully the jury came down on our side.”
Ian Kehoe, the paper’s former editor, said at the time:
“This is about the right of every media organisation in this country to publish what’s genuinely in the public interest and of public importance.”
That night, there was a sense among us that, even if we were all about to lose our jobs, at least this much had been achieved. O’Brien’s case had been — in the words of the broadsheet newspaper’s lawyer Michael McDowell SC in his closing speech to the jury — “thrown out on its backside”.
How the Business Post reported its court win that Sunday (Photo: Twitter)
Before long, I had to consider my own situation again. Eventually, after much soul-searching and many tears during various meetings with my employer and a few long chats in quiet corners with my colleagues, with a heavy heart, I decided to join the leavers.
I was one of more than 40 editorial staff who left the place by the end of April. Our publisher — DMG Media Ireland — had employed 156 staff in Dublin until last April’s exodus.
It was when I saw excellent journalists like our political editor Senan Molony — to name just one — being let go that I could clearly see that the number one priority for management was reducing the wage bill. There was genuinely no element of judging anyone by how well we did our jobs.
Even though this scenario was being echoed in newsrooms across the world, that makes it no easier to view it objectively when it hits your own workplace.
Leaving was a hugely difficult decision for me because I love newspapers and only ever wanted to work for one since I was 18. I felt at home there.
During the long process of negotiations about which of us might agree to take the bullet, falling newspaper sales and declining advertising revenue were constantly cited to us as the main reasons for the layoffs.
Newspaper-free Zone
TheCity.ie stopped by this Daybreak newsagent on Aston Quay, which has recently stopped selling newspapers altogether. The man behind the counter told me: “We don’t sell newspapers. It’s hard to cover the cost of it. Everyone is using the mobile applications. Some people feel it’s a waste of the trays.” (Photo: Paul Caffrey)
However, I felt the whole process was handled as sensitively as it could have been. I departed wishing those who remained from our fantastic team of exceptional journalists, editors and sub-editors well — including editor-in-chief Sebastian Hamilton and chief executive Paul Henderson, both of whom I’d enjoyed working for.
Over the past year, I’ve felt every inch of what these studies describe. Like the loss of a very close loved one, something I’m also painfully familiar with, it affects every part of your life. As to whether I’ll ever venture to take up permanent employment again, even if it’s offered, I’m still undecided.
Meanwhile, there was further drama in May 2019 when the Rupert Murdoch-owned Times Ireland shut down its print edition less than two years after it had launched.
Most journalists at the title were forced out of their jobs with redundancy pay that was condemned by the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) for being “miserly”.
Many staff were reportedly furious to be told they wouldn’t be entitled to redundancy pay unless they’d worked for that company for more than two years.
Despite all this, about half a million newspapers are sold each day in Ireland, according to Irish Times Circulation Director Fran Walsh. He told TheCity.ie:
“People think print is dead…If you launched any product today into the market and went and said, ‘we can sell half a million of this product on a daily basis’, it would be a phenomenal business.”
However, back in the early Noughties, the Sunday Independent aloneboasted having one million or more readers on its front page, week after week.
The Sunday Independent proudly advertising its 1.1 million readers on its masthead in the pre-smartphones era – October 6, 2002. (Photo: Paul Caffrey)
Despite all the upheaval since those glory days, newspapers remain an essential part of our daily life.
Without them, the Watergate scandal would never have been exposed by Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. Their comprehensive, investigative exposé led to President Richard Nixon’s resignation in August 1974.
The painstaking investigative work of Woodward and Bernstein was dramatised in the 1976 film All The President’s Men.
PRINT TRADE: TheCity.ie found this pop-up newspaper vending stand in Raheny, north Dublin, that still sets up near a church every Sunday (Photo: Paul Caffrey)
Without newspapers, we’d never have learned the extent to which British MPs were on the take with their expenses claims from the Daily Telegraph in 2009. That newspaper made its own film, The Disk, about its findings.
EXPOSED: How the now-defunct News of The World broke the story that rocked the world of sport in 2010(Photo: Pinterest.ie)
Newspapers also run important campaigns — such as the UK Daily Mirror’s opposition to the Iraq War in 2003, and closer to home, the Irish Daily Mail’s recent campaign to ban smartphones for under-16s.
According to the Project for Excellence in Journalism in the US (now part of the Pew Research Center), most original journalism is still produced by newspaper journalists.
Moreover, newspapers still largely set the broadcast and online news agenda. RTÉ’s Morning Ireland has two paper reviews each morning, while Sky News has two paper reviews each night and a more in-depth look at the day’s papers every morning.
Employment crises in newspapers are nothing new. TheCity.ie recently found this Linotype-style machine, produced by the Intertype Corporation (founded in 1911) sitting in the foyer of the Irish Times printing plant at Citywest, Dublin. Machines like this were used to typeset material for newspapers from the 1880s until the 1980s in some countries. On Fleet Street in the ’80s, there was huge resistance to modernisation by typesetters’ unions anxious to prevent job losses. The so-called ‘Wapping Dispute’ of 1986 saw Rupert Murdoch infamously sack over 5,500 print workers after they went on strike over the impending changeover to new technology (Photo: Paul Caffrey)
The global surge in redundancies also poses a clear threat to journalism itself.
With job security in the newspaper business now harder than ever to come by, many talented journalists I know have left the industry and secured jobs in public relations and communications roles instead, working for political parties, State bodies, charities and NGOs.
And when the poacher turns gamekeeper, surely the quality of the journalism on offer to the public suffers.
CRISIS YEAR: People are still buying newspapers (Photo: YouTube)
“…stories not written, scandals not exposed, government waste not discovered, health dangers not identified in time”.
In my view, the only solution for now is that good journalists keep striving to hold the rich, the powerful, the incompetent and the reckless to account with rigorously researched and verified original content.
Unemployment in Ireland is at its lowest since before the economic crash of 2008, according to new data from the Central Statistics Office (CSO).
The latest figures from the CSO show that the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for October fell to 6 percent, down from 6.1 percent in September.
The unemployment rate has continuously decreased in the last year, with a 1.2 percent decrease between October 2016 and October 2017.
The figures released show that 131,300 people in Ireland were unemployed in October 2017, compared to the 158,100 people who were unemployed in Ireland during the same month last year.
Although the unemployment rate is higher in males than females, both rates decreased in the last year. In October 2017, the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was 6.7 percent for males, down from 6.8 percent in September 2017 and down from 8.1 percent in October 2016.
The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for females in October 2017 was 5.1 percent, which remained unchanged from September 2017 and was down from 6.1 percent in October 2016.
The unemployment rate for young people aged 15 to 24 years is still higher than the unemployment rate for people aged 25-74 at 14 percent in October 2017 down from 14.7 percent in September 2017. However, unemployment in young people decreased by 2.7 percent between October 2016 and October 2017. The unemployment rate in people aged from 25 to 74 has remained unchanged since June 2017 at 5.2 percent.
The Department of Finance has predicted that the unemployment rate in Ireland will fall below 6 percent by the end of the year.
Unemployment expected to dip below 6% before the year’s end.
Fiona McCudden from the Department of Business, Enterprise and Innovation directed thecity.ie to the government’s ‘Action Plan for Jobs’ initiative as one explanation for the encouraging employment figures.
The most recent plan released by the government in February of this year details 164 actions and 430 measures to be implemented throughout the year 2017 by 16 Government departments and 43 agencies under the department’s remit.
The plans aim to support job-creating businesses and remove barriers to employment. It also attempts to prepare businesses for unexpected disruption to the employment sector, such as Brexit, by providing advice on minimising risk regarding exports, investment and expansion etc.
Since the first ‘Action Plan for Jobs’ was released in 2012, the unemployment rate has fallen by nine percent, but positive economic growth across all sectors of the economy is undoubtedly a contributing factor to these promising figures.
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