The number of jobless people around the world rose by four million in 2012 to 197 million and is expected to grow further, the UN labour agency warns.In a report, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) said the worst affected were youth: nearly 13% of the under 24s were unemployed.It said global unemployment was projected to rise 5.1 million this year and by a further three million in 2014.The trend reflected a downturn in economic growth, the document said.This was particularly the case in developed countries.The report, “Global Employment Trends 2013” indicated that 6% of the world’s workforce was without a job in 2012.It revealed that long-term unemployment was also growing, pointing out that a third of Europe’s jobless had been without work for over a year. Many were giving up, with the report estimating that 39 million people had withdrawn from the labour market.“An uncertain economic outlook, and the inadequacy of policy to counter this, has weakened aggregate demand, holding back investment and hiring,” the ILO director general, Guy Ryder, said.The report also called for more funds to be injected in vocational training to equip young people to do the jobs available.“This is a massive waste of the lives of young people and their talents, and extraordinarily damaging to the people themselves and their societies,” Ryder said.The ILO pointed out that countries, which had retained apprenticeships, such as Germany, Austria and Switzerland, had the lowest levels of youth unemployment.