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Is the lack of employer density in a rural area a big problem for rural kids finding their first jobs? Is transportation a huge obstacle? Or do rural kids maybe find it easier to pick up small, maybe short-term jobs here and there? Is it harder for young men or young women to find rural work?
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Interesting question. Having lived both in metropolitan and rural areas, I think it may be easier for rural kids in one aspect: a lot of smaller, part-time jobs are with people they or their parents know. The employment relationship is more likely to be an informal one -- babysitting, yard work, watching a house/picking up mail/feeding pets while someone is on vacation, moving, and so forth. I know some people have "created" jobs for kids they know who are trying to reach a goal for a student trip or saving for college.
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I agree. Having grown up in a rural setting and then raising my kids in a metropolitan area, I think it is easier to get a "job" in the city but easier to be an "entrepreneur" in a rural area. When I was growing up, I had no trouble offering my services around the area for mowing lawns, raking leaves,and painting houses and farm buildings. People would hire me because they knew me and/or my family. It is difficult to do that in a city because people don't know each other as well. However, my kids had much more access to entry-level jobs such as in fast food as they were growing up in a city.
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Being a city kid and reading this thread, I'd guess far more opportunities in the city.
Sure, I've got family in small towns and know that everyone knows everyone. BUT, in a big city I just see endless opportunity. (I might not know everyone, but I Can easily know more people). I did tons of babysitting, pet sitting, and house sitting myself. Of course, from age 16 on, tons of W-2 jobs for the taking. Anyway, I am not sure I agree that small town means more "entrepreneur" type opportunities. Of course, when I was a kid, none of my friends did this kind of work. These days even less kids work. So, yeah, competition seems to be severely lacking in these areas - in this day and age. |
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Although I grew up in a city, I had plenty of work in rural areas. We picked strawberries, raspberries and blueberries from the time I was four years old (until I was ten and they said you had to be twelve to pick), and then from age 12 to age 15. A lot of the kids I knew from picking (particularly the boys) did haying as well. I also worked in sorting raspberries.
City work I got pretty easily, too, having a steady Friday night baby-sitting gig from age 11, other unsteady baby-sitting gigs that were once or twice a month, at 16 on also worked 3 hours every Saturday answering phones and cleaning the office of a chiropractor, and working as a chore worker for Visiting Nurse during the summer M-F during the day. I think it has more to do with knowing what is available and how to find it. |
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