THE WORSE COUNTRIES IN EUROPE TO FIND A JOB
There is over 19.3% unemployment in a country and almost 50% of the population under 25 is now unemployed. Another had almost banned government bonds before the IMF stepped in.
Not every country in Europe is recovering in terms of job creation for its citizens. Spain has the highest number of young unemployed in Europe with almost 50% and continues to grow. And construction workers make up a large proportion of the unemployed - after decades of the real estate boom, this became a spectacular bankruptcy.
One of the newest members of the European Union, Latvia, has almost 20% unemployment - one known as the European tiger. Ireland faces a difficult future when the nation's construction boom failed and the former Celtic tiger remained, who had to take a number of stringent austerity measures to offset the country's enormous debt.
These countries are the countries with the worst jobs in construction, real estate and banking. And with high unemployment, especially for people under 25, there is no room for older, more experienced workers.
They lack natural resources and are essentially in the euro zone, which many experts believe is protected from a worse scenario because the euro remains a strong currency in the international market.
Britain also has a high unemployment rate, although roughly the same number of jobs are available as the country's high unemployment rate. Most of these jobs are either in the green tech industry or in the low wage industry.
The lesson is: don't go to these countries to find a job unless you're a specialist in an area like green tech or education. The worst may be over, but Spain, Ireland and Estonia are on a long way to change before unemployment drops effectively.