StatedoleU25Stateover25StateallNetMigration[Click images to enlarge]

These graphs show the number of people of both sexes on the Live Register in the State aged under 25, over 25 and all ages between January 2007 and October 2013, (courtesy of the Central Statistics Office).

They show the number of people aged under 25 on the Live Register has dropped from around 95,000 in July 2009 to just under 65,000 in October 2013.

The number of people aged over 25 went from just over 340,000 in July 2009 to around 333,000 in October 2013.

The third graph shows, the number of people of all ages on the Live Register has gone from just over 430,000 in July 2009 to just over 396,000 in October 2013.

Meanwhile the last table, above, shows the number of people who have  arrived and left the country since 2008. The net migration figure is a negative when more people leave than arrive and positive when more people arrive than leave.

It shows that, out of all the age groups, since 2011, the 15-24 age group has seen the worst net migration figures.

Proof if it were needed.

You can see details for YOUR own social welfare office here.

Previously: U25s With Jobs Fallen By 60%

wes-anderson-short-poster

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWnKRJ4c8xY

What you may need to know

1. No, it’s not a trailer. It’s a new Wes Anderson short.

2. As opposed to the new Wes Anderson movie or the new fake Wes Anderson movie.

3. We met Jason Schwarzman once, shopping for obscure ’60s music in Tower Records, Dublin. Naturally.

4. Schwarzman’s mother is Talia Shire, AKA Adrian from Rocky. Yo Adrian. His cousin is Nicolas Cage, and his uncle is Frances Ford Coppola.

5. Broadsheet Prognosis: Wes Anderson = the Mark E. Smith of American cinema. Always different, always the same. And we love that.

Release: N/a

 

castle

No smiley face?

Paul Flynn writes:

Through the letterbox yesterday in Phibsboro [Dublin]. ‘hand written’ invitation to sell the gaff…

Meanwhile…

 

-1By Tom O’Dea and Brian Kenny.

Who will be exhibiting in the Gallery of Photography, Temple Bar, Dublin this evening and all weekend, as part of the Le Cool Compound.

They say:

The cover is based around our concept for the LeCool Compound, it uses the rules of a maths puzzle called Conway’s Game of Life. Each dot ‘lives’ or ‘dies’ from frame to frame based on the number of neighbours it has. If a dot has too few or too many neighbours it disappears…

 

The Le Cool Compound is an interactive exhibition as part of National Science Week featuring Lightscape and Tom O’Dea, Designgoat, and the Urban Farm.

More details here.
This week’s le cool Dublin issue:

Broadsheet.ie