Graduating Students Face Double Challenge in Difficult Economic TimesBMO offers tips to help post-secondary grads get started on a solid financial and career track
TORONTO,
May 8, 2009 – With the unemployment rate expected to average
8.5 per cent in 2009, graduating students will need to be focused and disciplined
to ensure they start on a solid financial and career path.
“This year's crop of graduating students face the burden
of paying down outstanding student loans and looking to land a full-time
job,” said Sid Chopra, Vice-President, Every Day Banking, BMO Financial
Group. “We invite graduates to come talk to us to help them make
sense of their finances and get started on the right track; offering
students free banking one year after they graduate is just one way we
can help.”
According to BMO Economics:
- Youth employment
(age 15-24) is already down 5.6% in the past year to April, compared
with a lesser 0.7% decline for older workers (age
25)
- Job prospects will be particularly bleak in construction, manufacturing
(especially the auto industry), resources (outside of gold), restaurants
and tourism
- Who's
hiring – Government, health care, social assistance,
and downscale eateries
“Suffice it to say this won't be a great year for anyone
to find a job, with the unemployment rate expected to reach its highest
average annual rate in 12 years,” said Sal Guatieri, Senior Economist,
BMO Capital Markets. “However, that is still well below the double-digit
peaks reached in the last two recessions,” he noted.
To help students manage their debt and day-to-day expenses, BMO offers
the following tips:
Start paying off student loans, credit cards
Map out your debt from loans and credit card balances. Whenever possible
pay your balance in full each month. If you cannot pay the full amount,
try to pay more than the minimum balance due. Remember, the faster
you pay off the balance, the less interest you will pay. Higher interest
credit card should be transferred to a credit card with a lower interest
rate. Pay off your most expensive debt first. This is the debt that
charges the highest interest rate, not the debt with the highest balance.
Find Flexibility
BMO's student line of credit repayment plans are very flexible.
For the first year after graduation, new grads are able to continue paying
interest only as a monthly payment. This gives you the cushion to find
employment and get some security before you are required to start paying
some principal down. The repayment schedule is very affordable starting
at 1 per cent of the principal and escalating slowly every year onward.
You can pay down your loan as quickly as you want and there are no penalties
for additional payments.
Put together a realistic budget and stick to it
Calculate income (summer job, part-time job, parental support, savings,
etc.) against fixed expenses such as groceries, phone, internet, tv,
transportation, entertainment, credit card payments, loan payments
and discretionary spending money.
Save wherever you can
Look for promotions, discounts and anything else you can find. BMO is
the only bank that offers students free banking one year after they
graduate. Avoid unnecessary banking expenses that can add up over time.
Debit card purchases and transactions made from other-bank ABMs can
be costly if they are not included in your bank plan.
Landing a Job
“The key to successful job hunting, especially in a softening
economy, is knowing how to market yourself,” advised Karen Hartley,
Senior Vice-President, Recruitment and Intake, BMO Financial Group. “This
economic crisis has hit students just as hard as it has their parents.
In today's environment, competition is going to be fierce for any
job, regardless of whether it's an entry-level position or a big
step up the corporate ladder so you really have to create a buzz about
yourself.”
To help students
stand out amongst the crowd of job-seekers, BMO offers the following
tips, also
available on youtube.
Get help
with your resume. Most schools have a career services office
that will help you with your resume and interview skills. Focus on what
skills you have obtained from your previous jobs and volunteer experience.
Network. Think of the people
you know – relatives, friends, professors,
and others. Make a concerted effort to meet with people, and use these
conversations to ask their advice and to make them aware of your job
search, your work interests, and your skills.
Take full
advantage of the Internet. The internet is your friend. With
recruitment and advertising dollars becoming tight, especially in a slow
economy, the Internet is fast becoming become a focal point for recruitment
and hiring. Job boards should always be one of the first sites you visit
when you start your job search.
Be enthusiastic. Throughout your job search you will speak with many
people at different levels. Take every opportunity to show the company
that you have the skills, knowledge and attitude that would help you
make an immediate and meaningful contribution to the team.
Highlight
related work experience. Focus on the relevant skills that
you have gained through past work or volunteer experience. Consider volunteering
in related jobs to gain experience. Be prepared to discuss how they apply
to the position you are applying for.
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