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Employment Crisis: Jobless Rate for Young Women Nears 35%

Employment Crisis: Jobless Rate for Young Women Nears 35%

Youth Employment Crisis: Jobless Rate for Young Women Nears 35%

May 29, 2025
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New official statistics reveal a deepening employment crisis in Iran, particularly for young women. The figures—published by the state-run Eghtesad News on May 15, 2025—show that unemployment among women aged 20 to 24 has reached a staggering 34.9%.

The data, compiled by the National Statistical Center (NSC), underscores a bleak labor market that disproportionately penalizes the country’s youth and women, exposing the long-standing failures of the clerical regime’s economic policies.

With youth unemployment drastically higher than the national average, the report serves as yet another warning sign of systemic dysfunction under the Iranian regime.

Unemployment Soars Among Iran’s Youth

According to the report, the national unemployment rate in winter 2025 (December 2024 to March 2025) stood at 7.8%. But this average figure masks the crisis faced by younger Iranians. For those aged 20 to 24, the overall unemployment rate was an alarming 23.1%—three times the national average.

The next group most affected was the 25–29 age range, with a jobless rate of 17%. The 15–19 age group followed, registering a 15.8% unemployment rate.

These numbers reflect a growing demand for jobs among young Iranians as well as the regime’s failure to create sufficient employment opportunities.

The joblessness crisis is exacerbated by systemic issues like nepotism, the prioritization of regime loyalists in hiring, and widespread corruption.

Women Bear the Brunt of the Economic Collapse

Unemployment among women was even more catastrophic. The overall jobless rate for women in winter 2025 was 14.2%—more than double that of men, whose unemployment rate stood at 6.5%. But the most shocking figure was the unemployment rate for women aged 20 to 24, which reached a staggering 34.9%. Girls aged 15 to 19 weren’t far behind, with 30.7% unemployed. The third-highest group was women aged 25 to 29, with a 29.1% unemployment rate. This means that one out of every three young women seeking employment is unemployed.

In a country where women make up a significant portion of university graduates, this high unemployment rate is not only a cause for concern but also a sign of a dysfunctional system—one that has not only severely limited job opportunities but also institutionalized gender discrimination.

Iranian women face numerous economic, cultural, and legal challenges, all under the shadow of a patriarchal and repressive regime.

Youth Employment Crisis: Jobless Rate for Young Women Nears 35%

Structural Issues and Manipulated Statistics

The report fails to provide a complete picture of the labor force, as it does not include data on labor force participation—the percentage of people either working or actively seeking work. This omission is significant, as unemployment rates alone can be misleading. For instance, a declining unemployment rate may not indicate more jobs but rather fewer people searching for them due to hopelessness. Many young Iranians, especially women, have stopped looking for work entirely, disillusioned by decades of broken promises, lack of economic reform, and absence of personal freedom.

This kind of statistical framing is common in reports produced under the supervision of the regime. By omitting crucial figures such as labor force participation and underemployment, the clerical regime avoids confronting the full scale of its economic failure.

A Generational Crisis with No Real Solutions in Sight

As the report notes, unemployment decreases in older age groups—not necessarily because more jobs exist, but because people often withdraw from the labor force altogether. Many in older age groups are either retired, pushed out of the labor market, or simply too disillusioned to continue job-hunting. The statistics do not point to a healthy economy, but to a labor market where opportunities shrink as people age—unless they belong to the regime’s elite or military-industrial complex, such as the Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

Moreover, the shrinking job market for Iran’s youth mirrors other troubling trends—rising rates of emigration, widespread mental health issues among young people, and a growing wave of discontent that has repeatedly erupted into nationwide protests.

The inability of the Iranian regime to respond to these concerns with anything but repression shows the political nature of the economic crisis. Economic change cannot occur under a system that treats dissent as treason and considers women second-class citizens.

Conclusion: No reform is enough; regime change is the only path to salvation

The unemployment crisis facing Iran’s youth, particularly its women, is not simply a consequence of economic mismanagement but the direct result of the Iranian regime’s oppressive and outdated ideology. With nearly 35% of young women shut out of the workforce, the regime is not just wasting human potential—it is actively destroying the future of an entire generation.

The data presented by Eghtesad News paints a grim picture, even when sanitized for public consumption by a state-run outlet. For every figure they report, the lived reality for Iranian youth is far more dire. Until there is a complete overhaul of the clerical regime—a system that prioritizes control over competence and repression over reform—Iran’s economic and social crises will only deepen. This is not just a failure of policy; it is a failure of the state.

Tags: Gender Gap
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