“It is important to remember that the future is built today, with and for the new generations. In education, employment, entrepreneurship, housing... In the generation of new generations”, said António Costa to Jornal de Notícias.
With a strong focus on young people and without any reference to the current political situation, the chief executive recalls the "passion for education" of fellow socialist António Guterres, stating that this "was not inconsequential" and that "education in Portugal has changed in these 27 years and, with education, he changed the country”, a passion that “continues today, with coherent and inclusive public policies”.
“The new generation offers us the greatest asset that a country can have: more qualified citizens. We therefore have an obligation to ensure that these young people can choose Portugal to work”, he warns.
According to Costa, along with the creation of qualified jobs, a “fair labour market” is needed, adding that “this month the Assembly of the Republic approves the Decent Work Agenda”.
“And we need living wages. The Medium-Term Agreement in Public Administration ensures that in 2023 the base salary for entry into higher technical careers will be 1,320 euros, putting pressure on the private sector to increase wages when hiring qualified young people at the beginning of their careers”, he defends.
Housing
For the prime minister, “housing is perhaps the greatest concern of young people when they become autonomous”.
“After decades in which the State resigned from promoting public housing policies, we are now acting, also together with the municipalities. We approved the first Basic Housing Law, the National Strategy and the first 223 Local Housing Strategies have already been contracted”, he lists.
The Recovery and Resilience Plan (PRR), continues Costa, “has planned 2.7 billion euros to invest in housing, which will be a real structural change to be implemented by the end of 2026”.
“Today we are building the country that will be carbon neutral in 2050, which in the 40s will have a per capita GDP above the European average, which by 2030 will lift 660,000 people out of monetary poverty, halve the number of children in this situation and will invest 3% of GDP in R&D, and that by 2026 the public debt will be below 100% of GDP. This future is built in the present”.
Does he not understand that young people don't stand a chance of buying a home. Everything is sold to fouriners as sec homes. Shameful. !!!!!!. They will not be able to buy a tent ???? nervermind a home.
By J from Lisbon on 02 Jan 2023, 18:28
Sure, continue voting for communists and socialists it helps a lot :D
By SS from Porto on 02 Jan 2023, 22:04
J from Lisbon: “They will not be able to buy a tent???? Never mind a home.” – Some young people were living in tents by the Tagus river a while ago. And since, as you say, a tent might be hard to afford these days, government probably expects us all to go live in the sewer, with that nice lion-human bloke from 80s show “The Beauty and the Beast”, starring in Pt cities instead of NY, this time around.
By guida from Lisbon on 03 Jan 2023, 04:19
Perhaps Mr. SS was more inclined with Paços Coelho ~15 years old (honest, but shameful) call for young people to emigrate… I am happy that the new generations finally have a government that supports their/Portugal’s future, and not perpetuating whats fundamentally wrong with the country.
By Freebird from Other on 03 Jan 2023, 05:37
I'm not sure whether I should laugh or cry. There is such disconnect and dissonance in what he is saying. They are doing precisely that, pushing young out of the country by inviting golden visa investors, allowing uncontrolled airbnb and ensuring that cost of living is higher than average salary. Portugal is lagging behind Eastern Europe and soon will be overtaken by Romania.
In 10-15 years Portugal will be a country of old people and ruins.
By Roberto from Alentejo on 03 Jan 2023, 07:14
Abolish sales taxes on properties.
Lower IVA and sales taxes.
Problem solved.
This however would go against the core tenets of socialism, so it won't happen.
Very soon, the socialist boomers will have nobody to pay their pensions and only then will they wake up.
I love my country, we have so much potential here, but we are governed by foolish dinosaurs.
By Quentin Ferreira from Lisbon on 03 Jan 2023, 08:40
Roberto, Portugal is already decrepit, derelict and hopeless. The socialists with their glorious leader now thinks he can stay on forever as PM and finish destroying what is left of the country.
By K from Other on 03 Jan 2023, 09:54
Talked with a person today here in Caldas da Rainha...Said that he was going to the University of Lisboa and had to give it up to help is father in the Taxi business...The government and the PM are completley out of touch with reality...In the 6 years I have lived here...Nothing has been done for young folks let alone Adults...CP Combio to TAP...just to name a few...Empty EU promises and ECB shenanigans keep most in Portugal in the Poverty Trap...Reality vs. Fiction
By Sakamoto Saurezz from Lisbon on 04 Jan 2023, 20:15