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13 Jan 2014 13:22 #172994
by chairman
The average salary of young men working in Canada's oil patch increased by 21 per cent between 2001 and 2008, more than five times the pace of gain seen by those workers in other parts of the country.
According to a report published by Statistics Canada Monday, men aged 17 to 24 living in the oil-producing provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland and Labrador were more likely to have a job than their counterparts in other areas, less likely to still be in school, and more likely to earn more.
The employment rate for those men increased by five to six percentage points during the period in question. That's almost three times the growth seen by the same group in other parts of the country, Statistics Canada said.
"As wages … rose … young men's school enrolment tended to fall," the report said.
In Alberta, the percentage of young men enrolled in secondary or post-secondary education fell to 37 per cent from 44 per cent between the two years, and the percentage attending university on a full-time basis fell to 16 per cent from 17 per cent.
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SeanM
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14 Jan 2014 17:24 #173254
by SeanM
Very Interesting, but its a very similar trend in most areas where minerals and other mined commodities are rich, be it Gold or Silver or even Bauxite here in Jamaica, young men see Tertiary education as a waste of time and opt into getting a job from one of these companies who are always looking for labour in times of economic boom.
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Oil patch salaries rise 5 times faster than rest of Canada
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