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Let's assume, for the sake of argument, that the effective unemployment rate is 20%. We put these people to work and, presumably, they have more money to spend. Let's assume that demand also goes up by 20% (not realistic since the unemployed aren't spending zero, but just as a talking point).
If they spend the money on typical consumer items then manufacturing will go up. But, most manufacturing is already highly efficient and has spare capacity, so adding an extra 20% might need hardly any new employees (and outsourcing means that many would be elsewhere anyway).
With more employment services might increase which could add to the number of workers needed. If the poor have one haircut per month and now go to one per week, then the need for barbers goes up (slightly).
So, it is not clear that there is anything for the unemployed to do that is economically viable. One approach is to provide government employment as was done in the US during the depression. If a country chooses this path then what projects would be undertaken? The WPA produced some nice art work, but this was a marginal achievement. The CCC did some good forestry work, but mechanization means that a similar project these days would need far fewer workers.
My guess is that the amount of undone work in advanced societies is fairly small (although the US has lots of neglected infrastructure that could absorb workers, but this is supposed to be a discussion about the EU). Perhaps in highly advanced societies the solution is to cut down the amount of work each person does, in other words a variation of job sharing.
If the goal of eliminating unemployment is to reduce poverty than this should be treated separately. My 2 cents on how to eliminate poverty (in a US example) is here: Eliminate Poverty Policies not Politics ---- Daily Landscape
Nobel laureate economist Robert Solow, currently working on a Russell Sage Foundation study comparing low-wage work in Europe and America, believes that upgrading service-sector work is crucial for the American economy. Pessimistic about the future of domestic manufacturing, Solow notes that some European nations make civil servants of child-care and elderly care workers, and pay them accordingly. "We usually think of a revived WPA creating employment in construction and manufacturing work," he says, "but if it's not focused on the service sector, it won't be that useful. That's where the demand is." One such neo-WPA proposal, appearing on California's primary ballot this June, is Rob Reiner's initiative to create universal preschool for the state's four-year-olds, funded by a tax on the wealthiest Californians. The measure includes $700 million to provide college training and credentials to child-care providers, and provisions that would enable them to form unions.
But the research I have seen suggests work hour reductions don't affect employment all that much (positively or negatively), so we may not get many new jobs out of that, although I think reduced work hours would be valuable in their own right even without big employment effects.
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