QCE
Electrical
- May 6, 2003
- 319
Finnish Engineering Students Protest High Numbers
HELSINKI (Reuters) - Finland's 40,000 engineering students walked out of their classes Wednesday to put pressure on the government to reduce the number of engineering places.
The students argue there are too many of them competing for too few jobs now that the technology boom has ended.
The boom in the latter half of the 1990s and the rise of Finish mobile phone maker Nokia sparked a surge in the number of places for engineering students at Finland's polytechnics.
"When the (technology) bubble burst, not a single step was taken backwards. The same numbers (of engineering students) are still taken in even though there is no work for them," said Sampo Hakli, chairman of the Finnish Union of Engineering Students.
Finland's engineering student intake has tripled over the last 15 years, with roughly a third studying information technology.
The walkout, large by Finnish standards, aims for numbers to be cut by 1,000 annually for the next five years.
Graduate unemployment is perceived as being a political problem in Finland, which has a relatively high number of college educated young people.
HELSINKI (Reuters) - Finland's 40,000 engineering students walked out of their classes Wednesday to put pressure on the government to reduce the number of engineering places.
The students argue there are too many of them competing for too few jobs now that the technology boom has ended.
The boom in the latter half of the 1990s and the rise of Finish mobile phone maker Nokia sparked a surge in the number of places for engineering students at Finland's polytechnics.
"When the (technology) bubble burst, not a single step was taken backwards. The same numbers (of engineering students) are still taken in even though there is no work for them," said Sampo Hakli, chairman of the Finnish Union of Engineering Students.
Finland's engineering student intake has tripled over the last 15 years, with roughly a third studying information technology.
The walkout, large by Finnish standards, aims for numbers to be cut by 1,000 annually for the next five years.
Graduate unemployment is perceived as being a political problem in Finland, which has a relatively high number of college educated young people.