A majority want to join the Civil Service

Archbishop of Granada attacks youngsters who want to be civil servants

He criticised those who expected their problems to be solved for them by others

The Archbishop of Granada, Javier Martínez, has attacked youngsters who want to become civil servants, considering the Spanish mentality of a ‘subsidised society’ as a ‘social illness’, especially in a time of crisis such as now.

*Source: typicallyspanish

*The complete text can no longer be seen.

Do you agree with the bishop? Why/why not?

Public exams are a test of faith 

Fifty-six percent of Spanish youth want a job with the government These young people are seeking the security that public employment affords But the crisis has limited the opportunities available

The Spanish province with the highest unemployment rate is Cádiz, at 35 percent. Maybe that's why 23-year-old Carolina Villarreal is quick to point out that when she was looking for work a few months ago, she didn't place any geographical limits on her search. She was willing to relocate anywhere in Spain. 

Though she has a bachelor's degree in labor relations and a master's in human resources, the only work she was able to find were badly paid internships - more or less the same thing she already had. She was offered, for example, a salary of 500 euros a month for an internship in the sales department of a company. 

"You can't even leave home on that," she says. So, although it was the company that had attracted her in the first place, she began to prepare for the exams for entry into the civil service, known in Spain as oposiciones. She says the decision was based "much more on the possibility of getting a permanent position than on the money. The private sector demands a high level of experience, but how are you supposed to get that if they don't hire you? By being an eternal intern?" she asks. 

Now, Villarreal, who lives in Puerto de Santa María, has a plan. She is studying for two different exams that do not require university-level qualifications (judicial assistant and court clerk). Her idea is to get in, and start climbing up the public ladder from there through "internal promotion." 

If she is successful in gaining a post, she will earn roughly 1,200 euros a month - enough to allow her to move out of her parents' home. But it is not going to be easy, even though she is overqualified for the jobs she has chosen. Over 18,000 people took the judicial assistant exam on February 26 - for a total of 140 jobs. In the clerk's office section, 8,000 hopefuls are competing for 43 jobs. 

When asked if they would prefer a permanent contract or a civil servant job, 56 percent of Spaniards between the ages of 16 and 30 who had recently entered the job market chose the second option. Only 14.5 percent chose a permanent contract; the remaining 28.9 percent had no preference, according to data compiled last year in a study by the Valencia Institute of Economic Research (IVIE).

Figures for urban areas (of more than 50,000 inhabitants) highlight these trends: 63.8 percent of young people there would prefer a public sector job. In 2008, this figure was 55 percent, and in 2005, 65.3 percent. Experts at IVIE explain that the effects of the economic slowdown of 2001-2002 can be observed in the latter figure. They also emphasize changes in the no-preference category: seven years ago, the figure was only 13.2 percent. Today, it's 23.1 percent. With youth unemployment around 50 percent, a decent contract or a public-sector post both sound like a kind of miracle to many. 

Though a lack of data makes it impossible to know how many thousands of people are currently preparing to take public entrance exams, figures from the private academies where they are studying shed some light. After a high in 2009 and 2010, student numbers are now decreasing, which points to a dampening of enthusiasm after the initial scurry towards the shelter of the oposición in the early years of the crisis. The obsession with reining in the deficit has drastically reduced the number of public sector positions now available. In MasterD and Adams (two of the larger academies), student numbers dropped 20 percent between 2010 and 2011. Even so, MasterD still receives over 215,000 applications a year. 

In 2008, 73,000 new public-sector jobs were on offer; this year, there are less than 10,000, according to MasterD's estimates. "Since the crisis, recruitment has dropped 30 percent in the private sector, but in the public sector, it has been reduced by 85 percent, and it doesn't look like this is going to change within the next two years," says Manuel Bagüés, who teaches economics at Carlos III University. 

María Reyes, a friend of Carolina Villarreal who also lives in Puerto de Santa María, Cádiz, is preparing for an exam on her own. She left her academy last month because she needed to speed up her studies and because her savings ran out

"My parents had to pay the last installment for me," says the 25-year-old, who hopes to be a teacher. 

Despite the current situation, these academies continue to promote their services, with the justification that the public entrance exam is a medium- to long-term option that promises equal opportunity in recruitment and promotion and better work-family balance than the private sector. Bagüés argues, however, that it is a "risky choice" nowadays, especially for those exams that require a great deal of preparation.

José María Peiró, professor of social psychology at the University of Valencia, also warns that those who are planning to accept a job for which they are overqualified in the hopes of later promotion "could be making a big mistake," as it is far from clear if things will return to normal after the crisis or if there will be a complete overhaul of the public sector. 

The professor says there may be a possible "rethink of how many civil servants are necessary and, above all, what level of qualifications they must have." 

The percentage of the Spanish population working in the public sector is 5.7 percent, in line with the EU average. Last July, 2.69 million people were working in the public sector in Spain, of which 1.65 million were civil servants (funcionarios). Civil servant entrance exams represent the other side of the coin to entrepreneurship as a way out in these difficult times. Although Spain saw an increase in entrepreneurial activities in 2011 over 2010, according to the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor report, the number of newly created businesses (5.8 percent) is still below average for the developed world (6.9 percent) - and the current figure is even lower than Spain's figures a decade ago (8.16 percent). 

It's true that a country's structural needs are often at odds with the realities of its citizens - a reality comprised of millions of different personal situations, preferences, plans, goals and dreams. 

"A lot of students ask me for advice about the future and I try not to sway them in favor of one option or another. But I do try to make sure they are well informed about the possibilities each offers," says Bagüés. This includes advice on whether public entrance exams are worth the effort or not

"Studying for the teacher's exam is my vocation," says María Reyes, who has a bachelor's in journalism and a master's in humanities. Up until a few months ago, she was an assistant teacher at Madrid's Francisco de Vitoria University where she earned 700 euros a month, a salary that was barely enough to live on, though her university studies were free. So when she saw that Andalusia was offering 3,000 teaching positions this year (the only region to do so; the Basque Country and Madrid will hold their next exams in 2012), she thought, "it's now or never."

María packed her suitcase and moved back in with her parents in Puerto de Santa María. She was nervous about returning to the family home after living on her own for seven years, but it turned out fine

"My parents respect my decision to take the exam," she says. Roughly 33,000 people will sit for the same exam, which means that 10 hopefuls are competing for each position. 

Though she has a bachelor's in education and has worked in various schools, 29-year-old Alba Santos has decided to prepare for the National Police exam at MasterD Academy. Her husband is a member of the force, which is why they moved to Madrid from their home town in Zamora. "I know what things are like out there, and the conditions my husband enjoys. I think the job gives you a lot of time to study other things, and there are also many different job options within the police force," she explains. Currently, she earns between 400 and 500 euros a month from giving private classes. 

There are many different types of people studying for public sector exams. Peiró, a university professor, says it's important to distinguish between the exams that people were preparing for before the crisis, and for which there is now an almost non-existent offer (a cause of great frustration), and those currently being prepared for by students in full knowledge of the situation and the difficulties that exist. 

There are also many different types of exams: state, regional and municipal exams; and types A, B and C, according to the level of study and training they require. The higher the level of the exam, the more preparation required - so much so in some cases that it is impossible for those preparing to sit it to hold down a job at the same time. 

Francisco Martínez, a 28-year-old from Valencia, was already thinking about taking the Register of Deeds exam (type A) before the crisis, while he was still studying for his law degree. "Practicing law in Spain is really boring," he says, with five years of studying for the public exam under his belt. He explains that the people who pass it often take between six and eight years to do so. Although he feels overwhelmed at times ("you feel like a burden on your parents"), he knows that this area has not been affected by cuts. Still, "it's a big sacrifice," he acknowledges. He studies nine hours a day from Sunday to Friday. His sister, a physiotherapist, is about to move to France, where she found the job that she couldn't get in Spain. 

Carolina Villarreal, the young woman from Cádiz who is hoping for a job as a judicial assistant or in the court clerk's office, says that if she doesn't get a position, that will also be her next option: looking for opportunities outside Spain. The stakes are high, but the chances are increasingly slim.

Comments

Montse said…
Hi, Graham. I' ve read the article and I am astonished. First of all, what does working as a civil servant have to do with recovering the “Christian identity”? and secondly, I don’t think he takes a lot of risks in his job like to speak that way.
Since the recession started, it seems like if the civil servants were the worse people in the world.
Anyway, I think it was an unfortunate statement.
Graham said…
Hi Montse,

I was wondering who the first PAPER PUSHER (or should I say civil servant?) would be to make a comment about this news. :D

I agree with you on your first POINT - I can't see the connection between an ambition to be a civil servant and the LACK OF Christian BELIEFS.

And I doubt that he TAKES any more RISKS than the rest of us.

But if I understand him correctly, I think his general point is a FAIR one.

Nowadays people try to get RATHER THAN give. They want to have everything without making an effort and blame everyone else if they don't get what they want. Nobody thinks what they can do to help others; only about what others can do for them. It's a very selfish society.

I don’t think he takes a lot of risks in his job IF HE SPEAKS that way.

Since the recession started, it SEEMS AS IF the civil servants were the WORST people in the world.
Anonymous said…
Hi Graham:

I think your work is unbelievable, ten days ago I saw your blog last time and you have made new ten pages more, almost one page by day. Do you agree Lucía? I hope to she reads it and writes here.

This post is to provoke us. I think you want we take part and we learn, but I think you have got it, because this Archbishop is an ignorant and rude. This is a Spanish problem, we don´t respect to other people, Graham. Instead to do anything to rest of the people, we have to criticize and to gossip other people. ¡What a pity!

You will see, Graham, the most ignorant people, always they are the most criticize. This Archbishop achieves perfectly, because he believes about gods, religions, myth, legend, etc. That is lie and false, that isn´t, and he lies to good people without formation. But he talks about civil servants and he doesn´t understand. He thinks a civil servant is a human being that is behind the table and without to do nothing, but when the Archbishop has to go to the doctor because he was ill, who will attend him? The doctor is a civil servant, like the policeman, as firefighter, etc.

Besides, a civil servant has worked hardly to pass an exam because the Spanish Constitution says that the civil servant will into to Ministry by merits, he is Archbishop by finger or by ham (In Spanish “a dedo o a jamonazos”). Please, Mr. Martínez, live your life in peace and leaves to live peace to rest of the people.

See you soon Graham and Lucía.
Graham said…
Some interesting points, Jose. Let's see if Lucía agrees with you this time.

I'll reply fully tomorrow. I'm too tired now :D
Graham said…
José,

Sorry for the delay in getting back to you.

I like your style of writing but it requires some energy to correct it. LOL


I think your work is INCREDIBLE, THE LAST TIME I SAW YOUR BLOG WAS 10 DAYS AGO and you have MADE ANOTHER ten POSTS, almost ONE A DAY. Do you agree Lucía? I HOPE (THAT) SHE reads it and writes here.

This post is to provoke us. I think you *(1)WANT US TO take part and learn - I think you have MANAGED, because this Archbishop is IGNORANT and rude. This is a Spanish problem, we don´t RESPECT OTHER people, Graham. INSTEAD OF DOING SOMETHING to HELP PEOPLE, we have to criticize and GOSSIP ABOUT OTHERS. What a pity!

You will see, Graham, the most ignorant people are ALWAYS THE ONES WHO CRITISIZE THE MOST. This Archbishop IS A PERFECT EXAMPLE, because he BELIEVES IN GODS, religions, myth, legend, etc. IT is ALL LIES and he lies to good people without ANY REASON.

But he talks about civil servants and he doesn´t understand. He thinks a civil servant is a human being that is behind A TABLE and *(2)WITHOUT DOING ANYTHING, but when the Archbishop has to go to the doctor because he IS ill, who will attend him? The doctor is a civil servant AS IS THE POLICEMAN, firefighter etc.

Besides, a civil servant has *(3)WORKED HARD to pass an exam because the Spanish Constitution says that the civil servant will ENTER Ministry ON MERIT, he is Archbishop by finger or by ham (In Spanish “a dedo o a jamonazos”). Please, Mr. Martínez, live your life in peace and LET OTHERS live THEIR LIVES IN peace TOO.


*(1) to want sb to do stg (we never say "want that..." in English)

(2) "without" acts like a negative and so is followed by "any"

(3) your homework for the next day:

What is the difference between "work hard" and "hardly work"? What do civil servants do? LOL
Anonymous said…
Hi Graham:

I seemed that hard means very much and hardly very strong, but I afterwuard I though, clumsy look out and looked for it in the dictionary and I have seen hard means force, strong, difficult and hardly means almost and nearly. I think "work hard" is work too much and "hardly work" is work little. ¿It´s right?

About the following question I don´t know if you tell me it seriously or with irony, so another day I will tell you, but there isn´t place in your blog for writing everything. LOL. José.
Graham said…
Jose,

Yeah, you got it.

I know that for many who work at the MOJ it is difficult to understand the difference between HARDLY WORK and WORK HARD :D

Maybe I am OVERDOING the lazy civil servant jokes but I like WINDING YOU ALL UP.

Have a good weekend.
Anonymous said…
Thanks you very much, Graham. Yesterday I found wind up and I know what means. It´s a good thing the people have sense of humour. See you tomorrow. José.