Publius Pundit - The quiet sad trend, since the defeat of the de Villepin effort to open up the job market by leather-jacketed fire-starters, has been … exodus … by France’s dispirited, bright, talented, educated non-rioting young people, who know that the socialist model France practices has absolutely no place for them.
This excellent Reuters piece has a lot of good information about this incredibly sad trend. It describes a young lawyer who left France and got a quick job at good pay in New York City, so unlike what he would have been offered in France, which claims to have a more ‘human’ system … if it didn’t warehouse so many of its young people into idleness.
I know some of these young people - Los Angeles has one of the biggest French expat communities in the U.S. You can’t walk down Marina del Rey without bumping into someone French. They’re in West LA, in Westwood, in Beverly Hills, in Los Feliz, in Venice, and further north in Santa Barbara. French wines and French restaurants and French language speaking are abundant here - and based on my own observation, there are more French in these places than the more stereotypical Mexicans - who are in other parts of this massive city. Los Angeles is really the French city, based on these new waves of immigration. The French are the most desirable immigrants you can imagine, they work in entertainment, at places like Sony, in entrepreneurial farms that experiment with organic vegetable growing, in banking, in law, in software, in computers, in media. None of them wants anything to do with the French government. They just want to quietly prosper and be left alone and above all, to work.
As Albert Camus once wrote: Without work, all life becomes rotten. ________________________________
Held back at home, French try their hand abroad Reuters By Brian RohanMon Jun 26, 8:55 PM ET
Despite top grades at law school, two years as an intern and success at the bar exam, Simon Caille faced the prospect only of temporary work and low-paid assistantships as a new lawyer in Paris.
Instead, brandishing the English he picked up along the way, Simon landed an internship in New York that paid better than some entry-level salaries in Paris. Soon he had a full-time position as a lawyer for an investment bank.
"That's the way it should work in France, but the truth is you spend almost a year looking for a real job offer," he said during a visit to Paris. "Everyone knows that hanging around too long is unattractive to employers, so I just left."
France's famously rigid labor market survived intact this spring when street protests tripped up Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin's proposal to liberalize job contract laws for young people.
Its inflexibility is blamed for high unemployment and has prompted an exodus of young, well-educated French to look for work abroad.
Once only an option for the adventurous few, the growing globalization of the labor market has made the leap across borders, channels and oceans far more inviting for those with a good education, some language skills and get-up-and-go.
The Foreign Ministry estimated in 2004 that the number of French citizens living abroad had surged by almost 30 percent since 1992, from roughly 1.6 million to 2.2 million. Labour market experts say most of the job-seekers are young.
"They're looking for a hiring system that's more flexible than in France. And they're heading to countries where the 'casual job' culture is more developed," says Olivier Galland, a sociologist at the French National Research Center.
Last autumn's riots by poor suburban youths -- mostly children of immigrants -- highlighted youth unemployment of 22 percent overall and 40 percent or more in some poor suburbs.
Villepin's law would have made it easier for employers to hire and fire workers and so, he argued, give them greater incentives to create jobs.
Economists said it would have had only a minor effect on joblessness, but in any case Villepin's theory never made it into practice.
Protests by students and labor unions erupted against the erosion of France's formidable legal protections for employees, threatening the government and forcing President Jacques Chirac to cancel the law.
BRAIN DRAIN OR BRAIN GAIN?
"France may remain attractive for older people who set themselves up under the sun in some beautiful countryside, but it's no longer the case for a young, dynamic workforce," said Herve Le Bras, a sociologist at the School for Advanced Social Studies in Paris.
He says globalization is opening doors for young French abroad, but not for foreigners in France.
"If people were leaving simply due to European integration or globalization, there'd also be European foreigners coming to France to fill the gap, but so far the British, Germans, and Italians are not coming in significant enough numbers."
Le Bras fears France is suffering a brain drain. Galland is more positive.
"The fact that the French are participating more in a general mobility trend in the skilled workforce, in Europe or around the world, is a good thing," said Galland.
"They bring new experience back when they return."
The exodus is a new phenomenon for the French, traditionally reluctant to learn foreign languages or cross borders for work.
Even with the recent rise, data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development show that France still ranks low -- 22nd out of 27 countries -- in terms of the proportion of its native-born population that works abroad.
However, international job offers via independent recruitment sites are on the rise, and even the state bureaucracy is adapting.
The National Employment Agency, for example, has been developing its foreign placement wing and now coordinates with the European Commission to facilitate work-abroad programs.
In 2005, the body saw a 14 percent increase in the number of international job offers it handled compared with the previous year, and a rise of 6 percent to 5,359 successful placements. This summer, it plans to host international job fairs across France and information meetings on German, English, and French-speaking employment markets.
Laure Detalle Moreau, communications director for the ANPE's foreign placements effort, said most successful arrangements involved young people who had completed higher education.
She said applicants often accepted more junior positions than those for which they were theoretically qualified in France.
"The expat thing has been in fashion for a few years now, and people do it for the experience it brings," she said.
For European Union passport holders, work in most EU countries is unhindered by bureaucracy. In the United States however, employers must sponsor foreign workers' permits.
After almost three years in New York, Caille says he is thinking about returning to France.
"Coming here was great for a jump-start," he said, "but after you cut your teeth it's better to head back because visa issues complicate things over the long run."
"And once you've gotten started, France is a much kinder place." |