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mrstickball said:
Slimebeast said:
highwaystar101 said:
Slimebeast said:

Yes. The majority of youngsters in this generation want flashy or easy jobs like media, music & entertainment, art & design, sports, in fashion boutiques, as tour guides, become environmentalists, consultants, get into politics, become culture & society experts, historians, daytraders, bloggers or web-designers.

Not many want to do the hard labor.

Urgh, I hate to admit it as someone who is from generation Y (apparently), but you're right. We've entered a world where being a hairdresser is a respected and much sought after career. The west is just dominated by shallow tertiary industry jobs with flashy titles that don't mean anything (Eg: Hair technician/scientist).

Out of everyone I know who works, I think perhaps only 10% work in the primary and secondary industries. The concept is almost alien to them.

It's not that they don't want to work, it's that they just don't know about that kind of world because they have never experienced it (for reasons I wont get into here and now) and as a result they see the glamorous and shallow jobs as hard work.

I've tried my best to stay away from that world, that so many people my age engage in.

 

Yeah, it's a bit ridiculous, but it's also in some ways a good thing that people question the society norm of 9 to 5 work at any boring job just to make a living. It's also a fairly exciting to observe where society is going and see if the hard and boring jobs will raise salaries to attract these picky youngsters, or will there be shortages of good workers.

What will u do after u finish your degree?

I know where I live, the hourly wages for manual labor jobs is incredible. Plumbers, carpenters, construction workers, electricians, ect make $20-$40 an hour with only 6 months of trade school experience. Comparatively, I know college graduates that don't make that much because they chose crappy degrees in things that they wanted, not what the world needed.

Are they self-employed or do they get that money as regular employees?

It's similar in Sweden, workers are paid more than the typical university graduate.