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ZurückBut the results presented in this paper go much further: Europe’s budgetary situation would be significantly improved by achieving the employment target of the Europe 2020 strategy. The estimates presented in this paper suggest that a staggering €1000 billion by 2020 is at stake.<br /><br />Of course, raising employment rates is not an easy process, especially in the current economic climate. Frequently, short-term investment from the public purse is required, with labour-market improvements only happening further down the line. But this paper suggests that the short-term public finance argument should not be over-emphasised. The scale of the positive mid-term impact of higher employment on both public budgets and the ageing challenge implies that finance ministries should look at labour-market policy differently: not as a social outlay, but as an investment in the future which will provide significant returns.
Josef Wöss
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