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The Canadian stand at a Working Abroad expo in the RDS Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland

School-leavers and graduates make up larger chunk of emigrants than last year

18-29 year-olds comprise a whopping 78% of Irish visa applicants.

IRISH YOUNG PEOPLE leaving secondary school and graduating from college make up a larger chunk of emigrants than they did last year, according to figures published today.

The annual Migration Index by emigration consultants VisaFirst found that between August last year and this year, 37% of those who applied for visas throughout the world fell into the 18-24 year-old age bracket.

That’s an 11% jump from 2012-2013, when the figure was 26%.

Overall, the 18-29 year-old group accounts for a whopping 78% of visa applications, with Australia, Canada and New Zealand still overwhelmingly popular as destinations.

There were fewer than 50 applications for US work visas, Edwina Shanahan from VisaFirst told TheJournal.ie.

She sees the age trends as a result of successful, longer-term emigration over the last few years:

More and more people are choosing to leave after they finish school and college, whereas the fall in 25-34 year-olds travelling could be accounted for by the fact that people in that age group who have left in the last few years have actually stayed away…

Economic recovery here has meant Irish people are more carefully researching destination countries in terms of their likely salary and quality of life, says Shanahan.

This is a marked change from previous years, when high unemployment in Ireland meant many more “felt they had to leave,” rather than wanted to leave.

As life in Ireland gets back to ‘normal’, more employment will be created and the numbers of people who feel they have to leave the country for work will hopefully decrease.
Where once information on visa options made up 90% of the advice we provided to people, now it may have reduced to 70%, and the rest is comprised of advice on average income in different countries, tax systems and average rent for each country.

While Australia is still by far the most popular destination, VisaFirst has seen a 7% jump in the share of Canadian visa applications.

Unsurprisingly, construction, engineering and trades dominate the professional profile of visa applicants, although there has been a drop in the industry’s share of applications, from 43 to 40%.

That’s a trend Shanahan predicts will continue, as the Irish construction industry recovers in the next few years.

The second and third most prevalent economic sectors were hospitality and nursing/teaching/caregiving, which both experienced a small rise to 10% of visa applications each.

Read: Returned to Ireland? Some emigrants feel out of the loop when they come home>

Only 16% of emigrants were unemployed before they left Ireland>

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    Mute Peter Cavey
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    Jan 12th 2020, 11:47 AM

    In places like Kansas or Texas, if the people there saw what our orange weather warnings were, they’d certainly have a chuckle.

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    Mute Brendan Cooney
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    Jan 12th 2020, 12:02 PM

    @Peter Cavey: a lot of them also laugh when somebody mentions climate change. C’est la vie.

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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Jan 12th 2020, 12:15 PM

    @Peter Cavey: The one thing that used to strike me when I lived upstate NY was how well they were able to manage difficult weather conditions. Roads were ALWAYS kept clear no matter how much snow fell. You would see the trucks sitting on the exits to the highways ready to go. They monitored the weather on screens in their trucks and when they knew snow was coming, they all hit the road and started spreading salt and using snow plough’s.

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    Mute mr magoo
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    Jan 12th 2020, 3:51 PM

    @David Corrigan: yes because they had it every year without fail and could justify the huge outlay. We could have services like that laid on year after year and no snow.

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