- 07 May 2024 10:45
#15314594
There has been a significant decrease in the percentage of white males who have attended college in the U.S. It went from 49 percent in 2011 to 40 percent in 2022.
(source here)
The overall college enrollment rate of 18 to 24 year olds was 38 percent in 2021.
It was 41 percent in 2010.
38 percent of whites between the ages of 18 to 24 were enrolled in college in 2021.
33 percent for Hispanic males.
(source here)
In 2023, men made up 42 percent of all 18- to 24-year-old college students, down from 47 percent in 2011.
(source here)
related thread: Why fewer Americans are going to college (in Health & Education section, July 18, 2023)
The reduction in college students is largely being led by men, with 1 million fewer young men in college and just 0.2 million fewer young women, in 2023 compared to 2011.
(source here)
American men are opting out of the workforce at unforeseen rates.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics found only 89 percent of working age men have a job or are actively looking for work. In 1950, that number was at 97 percent.
In the early 1950s around 96 percent of working age American men between the ages of 25 and 54 were working in full or part-time jobs. Now it has gone down to 86 percent.
And as fewer men financially support themselves, there are long-reaching economic and societal implications, experts say.
"The U.S. has a major issue of prime-age men giving up and permanently exiting the labor force," Robin Brooks, a senior fellow policy research firm the Brookings Institution and the former chief economist at IIF, wrote. "What's striking about this is that it doesn't get talked about at all, not in the mainstream media and not by economists, even though this obviously feeds political radicalization."
The 2008 Great Recession saw male employment decline from 88 to just 80.6 percent, and the rate has never been able to get higher than 86.7 percent since then.
During the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 it temporarily fell to 78 percent.
Women now outnumber men in college attendance, in a ratio of roughly 60 to 40 percent.
Rising Number of Men Don't Want to Work, Suzanne Blake, Newsweek, May 6, 2024
Part of this may be due to a growingly larger amount of jobs in the economy being the types of jobs that women traditionally did, as the economy has transformed more into the service sector.
The main exception to that would be tech and computer programming, but the entire tech industry in the U.S. employs 5.2 million workers, which accounts for only 3 percent of the total jobs.
(source here)
The overall college enrollment rate of 18 to 24 year olds was 38 percent in 2021.
It was 41 percent in 2010.
38 percent of whites between the ages of 18 to 24 were enrolled in college in 2021.
33 percent for Hispanic males.
(source here)
In 2023, men made up 42 percent of all 18- to 24-year-old college students, down from 47 percent in 2011.
(source here)
related thread: Why fewer Americans are going to college (in Health & Education section, July 18, 2023)
The reduction in college students is largely being led by men, with 1 million fewer young men in college and just 0.2 million fewer young women, in 2023 compared to 2011.
(source here)
American men are opting out of the workforce at unforeseen rates.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics found only 89 percent of working age men have a job or are actively looking for work. In 1950, that number was at 97 percent.
In the early 1950s around 96 percent of working age American men between the ages of 25 and 54 were working in full or part-time jobs. Now it has gone down to 86 percent.
And as fewer men financially support themselves, there are long-reaching economic and societal implications, experts say.
"The U.S. has a major issue of prime-age men giving up and permanently exiting the labor force," Robin Brooks, a senior fellow policy research firm the Brookings Institution and the former chief economist at IIF, wrote. "What's striking about this is that it doesn't get talked about at all, not in the mainstream media and not by economists, even though this obviously feeds political radicalization."
The 2008 Great Recession saw male employment decline from 88 to just 80.6 percent, and the rate has never been able to get higher than 86.7 percent since then.
During the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 it temporarily fell to 78 percent.
Women now outnumber men in college attendance, in a ratio of roughly 60 to 40 percent.
Rising Number of Men Don't Want to Work, Suzanne Blake, Newsweek, May 6, 2024
Part of this may be due to a growingly larger amount of jobs in the economy being the types of jobs that women traditionally did, as the economy has transformed more into the service sector.
The main exception to that would be tech and computer programming, but the entire tech industry in the U.S. employs 5.2 million workers, which accounts for only 3 percent of the total jobs.