Class of
2010 told to consider flipping burgers or shelf stacking to build skills as
they also compete with last year's graduates
Graduates are facing the most
intense scramble in a decade to get a job this summer, as a poll of employers
reveals the number of applications for each vacancy has surged to nearly 70
while the number of available positions is predicted to fall by nearly 7%.
The class of 2010 have been
told to consider flipping burgers or stacking shelves when they leave
university as leading firms in investment banking, law and IT are due to cut graduate
jobs this year.
Competition in the jobs
market is fiercer now than for the first "post-crunch" generation of students,
last year, when there were 48 applications for each vacancy.
The number of applicants
chasing each job is so high that nearly 78% of employers are insisting on a 2.1
degree, rendering a 2.2 marginal and effectively ruling out any graduates with
a third, according to the survey published tomorrow.
The Association of Graduate
Recruiters polled over 200 firms including Cadbury, Marks & Spencer, JP
Morgan and Vodafone and found the number of applications per vacancy had risen
to 68.8 this year, the highest figure recorded. In the most hotly contested
sector – makers of fast-moving consumer goods such as food, confectionery and
cosmetics – there were 205 applications for each job.
Carl Gilleard, the
association's chief executive, said graduates needed to be more flexible in
their career choices. "They need both short-term and long-term career
goals because you're graduating in a very tough climate. It doesn't mean you
should be put off applying for the profession of your choice.
"Any employment is
better than no employment [even] if it's about flipping burgers or stacking shelves
rather than being sat at home feeling sorry for yourself and vegetating. There
are lots of other skills required and valued, like people skills: you could be
on a counter in a store. It's all about building up your skills base. The big
fear is that some people just drop off the bottom of the scale – because
confidence goes very rapidly."
Gilleard warned that
employers were raising the bar on degrees, and graduates with a 2.2 or worse
faced being filtered out by automated applications. "There are dangers in
that. You can miss out on some very good candidates."
He said it was too early to
say whether this trend would lead to graduates with a 2.2 being excluded from
the job market altogether.
In 2008, when the economy was
buoyant, just 57% of employers insisted on a 2.1 or higher. Last year that rose
to 60%. "We need to wait for 2011 to see if this is a trend," he
said.
Graduate salaries are frozen
at an average of £25,000, the first time in the survey's history that starting
salaries have remained stagnant for two consecutive years. But there is some
positive news; the survey noted a revival in banking, the insurance sector and
accountancy where vacancies were predicted to rise this year.
Apprenticeships, which are
likely to expand under the coalition government, might provide an alternative
career path for some students, the survey noted.
Gilleard acknowledged there
was snobbery about apprenticeships, but said the children of the middle classes
should not assume they had to get a degree to succeed. "I think many
middle class parents are actually questioning, is this [a degree] the right
route that my son or daughter should follow.
"Too many young people
go [to university] because it's expected of them, and they don't think it
through from a personal perspective – what will it be like, apart from having a
good time."
As applications for
university places continue to soar, the government has urged universities to
publish statements revealing the help they offer to get their students ready
for work.
Responding to the survey, the
minister for universities, David Willetts, said: "The job market remains
challenging for new graduates, as it does for others.
"But a degree is still a
good investment in the long term, and graduates have a key role to play in
helping Britain out of the recession. We are committed to making it easier for
current graduates to find work. That is why I have just asked all universities
to provide statements on employability for their students."
The president of the National
Union of Students, Aaron Porter, urged the government to invest in creating
jobs and training: "We are concerned that the savage cuts to the public
sector will create further unemployment, and will make the lives of graduates
tougher in an already difficult jobs market."
For the fourth year in a row,
demand for university places has hit a record high.
At the end of May, there were
over 640,000 applications for places this autumn – an increase of nearly 14% on
last year.
As universities face an
increased challenge in selecting the best candidates, there is some scepticism
about the new A* grade, being awarded for the first time this summer in an
attempt to distinguish the cream of the crop.
Fewer than a third of
university admissions officers believe the A* grade would be crucial in
selecting the most able students, according to a separate survey published
today.
While over half of the 40
admissions officers surveyed believed grade inflation made it harder to pick
the best candidates, fewer than a third thought the A* was
"essential".
The survey was commissioned
by a network of international schools which favour a rival qualification, the
international baccalaureate.
Source: Guardian.co.uk