You're confused. You talk about internships, minimum wage jobs and entry level jobs as if they mean the same thing. No they don't. For example most internships pay $0.0.
Whereas entry level pay for a Harvard MBA on Wall Street can be as high a $100K. Many minimum wage jobs are just that, t
hey don't have a skill component whatsover.
There is no shortage of minimum wage jobs in Canada or the US. CNN reported recently that in some parts of the US companies are having a hard time finding people that will work for $12/hour. Many people choose not to take jobs that do not pay a living wage. Anyone who says that they can't find a job that pays minimum wage is just not looking hard enough.
JOBS GO BEGGING
http://jobs.aol.com/articles/2012/11/30/seasonal-jobs-go-begging-are-the-unemployed-getting-picky/
With unemployment hovering around 8 percent, you'd think unemployed workers would be champing at the bit to take a job -- any job. But shipping companies such as UPS Inc. and GSI Commerce Inc. can't find enough workers to staff warehouses in Louisville, Ky., a region with a 7.5 percent jobless rate.
According to the local Courier-Journal newspaper, UPS still had 200 openings paying $8.50 an hour on four shifts this week, three months after it announced plans to hire 1,000 temporary workers. To help recruiting efforts, the Atlanta-based parcel-delivery company has offered employees $150 bonuses for referring new hires, who also get the bonus.
Meanwhile, GSI Commerce, an eBay Inc. subsidiary, needs 300 people in the Louisville area, offering applicants wages of $9.25 to $10 an hour plus bonuses tied to attendance and performance.
Online retailer Amazon.com Inc. is also hiring in the region, offering a starting wage of $12 an hour for positions in packing and shipping, among others.
So why are the jobs going unfilled? In part, the shortage is caused by the large number of shipping companies in the area -- dozens of which have been attracted by the UPS Worldport sorting hub at the Louisville International Airport.
"We have attracted so many companies to come to the area and bring jobs here that they are competing for some of the same workers that we would like to have out in our hub," UPS spokesman Mike Mangeot told the newspaper.