Culture The Many Faces of NEETs - The acronym for young people “not in education, employment or training” has been all over the internet lately. But like Gen Z-ers themselves, the term can be misunderstood.

1733282227300.png
Cristina Spanò

By Callie Holtermann
This article is part of Shop Talk, a regular feature that explores the idioms of the business world: the insider jargon, the newly coined terms, the unfortunate or overused phrases.
Nov. 29, 2024, 5:00 a.m. ET

When they aren’t roasting millennials’ outfits or scrolling on TikTok, how are Gen Z-ers spending their time?

Most are either working or attending school. Some are doing both. But a significant slice of young people around the world — about 20 percent of 15- to 24-year-olds — is doing neither, according to a 2024 report on employment trends from the International Labor Organization, or the I.L.O.

They are what economists call NEETs, an acronym for young people “not in education, employment or training.”

How it’s pronounced​

/nēt/​



And despite what you may have heard, they aren’t all playing video games in their parents’ basements.

First, a brief history: The concept of young people not in employment, education, or training entered policy debates in the United Kingdom in the 1980s, as officials worried about the risks and disadvantages facing young people. In 1996, an official in the Home Office coined the acronym. (In Japan a similar term, hikikomori, emerged in the 1990s.) NEET has since become an indicator monitored by the E.U. and the United Nations.

A number of recent articles and social media posts have invoked the NEET concept to suggest that today’s young people are unmotivated to work. But that is not the full picture, said Sara Elder, a senior economist at the I.L.O.

Though a NEET can be someone voluntarily opting out of education and the labor market, it can also be someone unable to find work. A 17-year-old high school dropout who cannot find a job is a NEET. So is a 24-year-old caring full-time for a family member.

The global NEET rate crested in 2020, coinciding with the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. But it has been on a slow decline over the past two decades, dipping to 20.4 percent last year from 24.3 percent in 2005, according to I.L.O. data. In the United States, the share of “discouraged” young people — those who are available to work but are not seeking jobs, a slice of the total NEET population — has also declined in the last decade, Ms. Elder added.

“This idea that a swarm of young people are ‘opting out’ is not supported by the data,” she said.

And while many articles about NEETs focus on young men, women actually constitute two-thirds globally, largely because of social factors that limit their access to education, or saddle them with caregiving responsibilities at home.

Being a NEET for a short time is typical, according to Massimiliano Mascherini, the head of the social policies unit at Eurofound, a E.U. agency that focuses on bettering working conditions. But he added that remaining a NEET for too long can have negative economic ripple effects for the individual and wider economy.

Despite the stigma, some young people are embracing the NEET label. In August, the TikTok user Tynara McArthur, 19, posted a slide show explaining that she was a NEET because of a chronic illness that prevented her from attending school.

Many commenters accused her of being lazy, she said in an interview. But she plans to keep posting to help people understand that NEET status can mean different things for different people.

“People don’t understand how difficult it is being NEET,” she said.

In the hands of today’s young people, NEETS can be many things — including, apparently, an adjective.

Source (Archive)
 
Fuck this shit. I refuse to accept caping for useless drags on society. It particularly chaps my ass that there's nothing stopping them from actually contributing save for their own inertia.

Get the hell out of your parents' home and do something for fuck's sake. By their own admission, the NEET lifestyle is corrosive.

Also, any journalists trying to fucking normalize this shit like the cretin that vomited out this article should be summarily executed.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Qonas
The whole useless layabout thing has existed since the beginning of time and only got worse because everything requires a college degree now. You know what? Cobes did it. He won at life.
Boglim-maxxing will be the next Tiktok trend. Crumple your cowbot hats, smoke cigs indoors, drink for Ozzy Osbourne and collect that sweet, sweet paypig money.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Toji Suzuhara
Article title brought me war flashbacks of this earworm I was exposed to 4 years back.
There used to be a version of this on youtube with english translation subtitles and it's the most existential shit ever despite sounding cheery.
It is the theme of my personal hell I've lived in outside commistion or non full -timey work for years now! "we'll get to you later, don't worry!"
Now zoomers get to "TAKE THAT (taste the pain!)" I mean they already were and I feel just as bad for them as everyone else in the hell loop of unemployment and no money for any college shit, but like this article bothers the fuck out of me for a number of reasons. Article acts for one like a BIG CHUNK of later millenials haven't been in this hell forever now .

And while many articles about NEETs focus on young men, women actually constitute two-thirds globally, largely because of social factors that limit their access to education, or saddle them with caregiving responsibilities at home.
MEN OF THE FIRST WORLD COUNTRIES SUFFERING IN JOBLESS DEAD WEIGHT POVERTY BECAUSE NOBODY WANTS TO HIRE THEM AND THEY'RE GIVING UP. WOMEN MOST AFFECTED BECAUSE IN THIRD WORLD COUNTRIES THEY ARE FORCED TO BE STAY AT HOME WIVES.
HELL.
Thanks I hate it! Like for real this gives me weird vibes explaining basic concepts that have been around for years like they're a new phenomenon affecting Zoomers and gen alpha exclusively . ONCE MORE, TREATING IT LIKE A BIG CHUNK OF MILLENIALS GLOBALLY WEREN'T ALREADY FUCKING SUFFFERING FROM THIS SHIT. The info is fine, it's the presentation that bugs me, you know?

This is a small bit at the end but this fucking one still of this guy from that jap song video I linked is scary close to what I look like these days minus the missing teeth.
1733290667262.png
Whoever drew the animation frames on this thing really captured that desperate existential feeling people have had about their futures the last 10 years now in every first world country ever. Feels bad man, never stopped feeling bad, and never will till we break this fucking cycle somehow.
 
Last edited:
There used to be a version of this on youtube with english translation subtitles and it's the most existential shit ever despite sounding cheery.
It is the theme of my personal hell I've lived in outside commistion or non full -timey work for years now! "we'll get to you later, don't worry!"

I don't want to work (I don't want to work)
I want to laze around (I want to laze around)

How many times do I have to oversleep for my dreams to fade away? Poo~
Tomorrow is probably in the afterlife, ahfoo~
One minute of trying hard, brainwaves with modest cheers
Getting tired (Oh!) Getting impatient (No!), escaping to a different world
(Let's go!) Flattening out our small dreams
(Let's go!) Stuck from west to west
(Oh Yes!) ...followed by "Thanks for the meal~"
Life is a push-and-shove, don't cry when pushed! (Yeah!)

Born in an age that doesn't know love

Are you NEET? (Nice to NEET you!)
"Now, declare it here."
Are you NEET? (Nice to NEET you!)
"Work is our enemy."
Are you NEET? (Nice to NEET you!)
"Eradicate those real-life winners!"
Are you NEET? (Nice to NEET you!)
"Let's create an ideal country together!"
Are you NEET? (Nice to NEET you!)
"No effort required."
Are you NEET? (Nice to NEET you!)
"Don't expect too much."
Are you NEET? (Nice to NEET you!)
"Enjoy living this way!"
This is justice, Osomatsu-san! (Shee!)
this sounds about right
the coping that it's nice, the background of despair, the days bleeding together, and the feeling like you just got fucked by life for no real reason
 
  • Agree
Reactions: The Lawgiver
And while many articles about NEETs focus on young men, women actually constitute two-thirds globally, largely because of social factors that limit their access to education, or saddle them with caregiving responsibilities at home.
"Saddle them with caregiving responsibilities at home"

Is that a fancy way of saying they couldn't keep their legs shut or at least practice safe sex until post college degree?

I feel like it is.
 
Traditionally, some of the old-style British NEETs were actually earning their money illegally while also scrounging "benefits" money. Drug dealers, hookers, cigarette smugglers, etc. That group wasn't contributing to the tax base, which was one of the main reasons the UK was concerned about them.

Another group are spoiled young adults whose parents pay all their bills. The woman pictured up thread is wearing a nice dress and posing in a trendy room. So I'm guessing she just has rich parents who give her money.
 
this sounds about right
the coping that it's nice, the background of despair, the days bleeding together, and the feeling like you just got fucked by life for no real reason
There's a second part to it too, and I think third part that's not used in the TV show it was made to be used as an intro for, at least I don't think it was. IIRC it's about being forced into basically a parasitic relationship with people around you or some shit like that.
Also the days bleeding together is real as hell, even for average people with actual well set jobs. I didn't even realize this thing was 4 years old till I looked it up and all the videos were from 3 or 4 years back!
 
Back