FORMÉTAL & the "He-cession"
In any given year, over
100 young Montrealers learn a trade at Formétal. It’s a unique
initiative in social economics – a successful business that manufactures
metal products while helping high school dropouts break into the job
market.
Formétal’s training role takes on even greater importance
in the midst of a crisis that has been disproportionately tough on the
demographic group that benefits most from its services – young men under
25.
As of July, 71% percent of all Canadians who had lost jobs
in this recession were men. Furthermore, although workers under 25
account for only 15 percent of the labour force, they represent over one
third of the newly unemployed.
In a recent
report
from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, “Canada’s
He-cession,” authors Trish Hennessey and Armine Yainizyan note that the
country’s unemployment gender gap is “wider than at any time since
Statistics Canada began collecting gender unemployment statistics in
1976.”
The gender discrepancy is explained largely by heavy
losses in the manufacturing sector, where men dominate the work force.
Almost two thirds of all Canadians who’ve been put out of work by this
recession – over 215,000 from a total 370,000, as of July – were
employed in manufacturing.
However, Hennessey and Yalnizyan
predict this gender gap may narrow. Many economists are forecasting a
second wave of job losses in the service sector, where women will be
affected.
In the meantime, the “he-cession” has some observers
speculating on the broader cultural impact of the crisis – with some
predicting it will usher in an age of greater gender equality. Reihan
Salam, a fellow with the New America Foundation, usually associated with
more conservative causes, puts it this way: “It’s now fair to say that
the most enduring legacy of the Great Recession will not be the death of
Wall Street. It will not be the death of finance. And it will not be
the death of capitalism. These ideas and institutions will live on. What
will not survive is macho.” Read more of his argument
here.
Some Figures • 370,000: number of Canadians who lost their jobs between Oct 2008 and July 2009
• 262,00: number of Canadian men who lost jobs during same period.
• 217,00: number of Canadian manufacturing jobs cut during same period.
• 136,000: number of Canadians under 25 who’ve lost jobs during same period.
• 245,500: number of Ontarians who lost their jobs during same period.
References: Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives; Statistics Canada; Foreign Policy, 18 June 2009