Overview

Younger workers want to secure meaningful opportunities in the labor market, yet they often face challenges such as unstable job prospects, wage stagnation, and limited career advancement. As industries such as health care and energy grow, their need for new workers becomes increasingly urgent. Young workers, particularly those ages 18 to 24, represent a valuable talent pool capable of driving these sectors forward, but many available jobs fall short of providing the skill development, career pathways, and job quality necessary for them to thrive.

 

New evidence can inform how employers, policymakers, workforce practitioners, and advocates design quality jobs and career pathways that provide young workers with training and support that match their specific abilities and needs. Attracting and retaining a new generation of workers is critical for young workers and employers alike.

Featured Content
Skills and training, Young workers September 26, 2023
Article

The Impact of Student Debt on the Low-Wage Workforce

Student loan debt has a negative impact on labor market outcomes and economic mobility, with disparate economic impacts for low-wealth households. Burdens fall more heavily on Black and Latinx borrowers and those who did not complete their degree.
September 26, 2023
Two multiracial young women working in a clothing store behind the checkout counter
Economic context, Young workers Last updated on January 07, 2025
Video

WorkRise Shorts: Disaggregating Minimum Wage: Impacts on Younger Workers with Jennie Romich

How does a $15-an-hour minimum wage affect younger workers entering the labor market?
Last updated on January 07, 2025
Employer practices, Young workers Last updated on October 08, 2024
Research Summary

Young Workers Need Support When They Can't Find Their Footing in the US Workforce

During recessions, young workers are less likely to find work and face lower wage growth than more experienced workers. Unemployment Insurance could be reformed to support these young workers as they navigate the labor market amid economic downturns at foundational times in their careers, alongside other policy tools that can be effective in these instances.
Last updated on October 08, 2024

Latest Content

Employer practices, Young workers Last updated on October 08, 2024
Research Summary

Young Workers Need Support When They Can't Find Their Footing in the US Workforce

During recessions, young workers are less likely to find work and face lower wage growth than more experienced workers. Unemployment Insurance could be reformed to support these young workers as they navigate the labor market amid economic downturns at foundational times in their careers, alongside other policy tools that can be effective in these instances.

Madeleine Sirois

Last updated on October 08, 2024
Employer practices, Immigrant workers, Young workers, Energy transition, Workers in the South Brief Last updated on September 19, 2024

Extreme Heat at Work

This research brief offers the first nationally representative estimates of how outdoor and indoor workers are affected by extreme heat, highlighting that low-wage workers, defined as adults earning less than $15 an hour, face greater risks than higher-wage earners.

Lisa Clemans-Cope, Dulce Gonzalez, Sara McTarnaghan, Michael Karpman

WorkRise Research

Last updated on September 19, 2024
Skills and training, Young workers, Support during upskilling Report Last updated on August 27, 2024

Supporting Youth Economic Mobility through Employment-Focused Strategies

WorkRise’s new landscape research report on youth economic mobility reviews the evidence of programs and practices that help young workers succeed and advance in the labor market.

Shayne Spaulding, Madeleine Sirois, Amanda Briggs

WorkRise Research

Last updated on August 27, 2024
Skills and training, Young workers April 03, 2024
Research Summary

The Key Benefits of Career and Technical Education Programs in High School

Career and technical education in high school is considered a way to increase earnings and education after students graduate, but it also is a tool to reduce the most adverse socioeconomic outcomes in the years immediately following graduation.

Madeleine Sirois

April 03, 2024
Job search and matching, Young workers February 06, 2024
Research Summary

The Digital Divide in Job Hunting

Socioeconomic factors and gaps in digital skills impact who uses social media to look for jobs. Older workers and low-income individuals are less likely to have the technological literacy or digital access to look for jobs online, while digital skills and use of social media across racial and ethnic groups are varied.

Annabel Stattelman Scanlan

February 06, 2024