“…The context of the COVID-19 pandemic also reduced opportunities related to job search and availability of work for young adults during a critical life stage of entry into the labour market ( OECD, 2021c ). Qualitative explorations have indicated that these economic disruptions represented major concerns for young adults who reported increasing feelings of precarity, financial strain, and uncertainty about their career development ( Burgess et al, 2022 ; Lindsay & Ahmed, 2021 ). These experiences of emotional stress due to the COVID-19-induced economic crisis represent critical risk factors for mental health challenges ( Achdut & Refaeli, 2020 ; de Miquel et al, 2022 ; Graupensperger et al, 2022 ; Ranta et al, 2020 ; Shanahan et al, 2022 ), including depression, the prevalence of which has steadily increased among young adults in recent decades ( Mojtabai et al, 2016 ).…”