Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2003-06-03-Speech-2-281"
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"en.20030603.7.2-281"2
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".
I totally agree with you, I only need give you a few figures. In order to achieve the objective of full employment in 2010, we need to create 22 million jobs for the 25 new countries, so that we arrive at unemployment throughout Europe in the order of 3.5% – 4%. Is this feasible? As you quite rightly said, provided growth rates are achieved and the agreed reforms are applied, we have statistics from the past to show that we created 5 million jobs in the 15 countries alone over a four-year period. Thus a combination of growth and reform can indeed give the desired result.
My second comment is that obviously the problem is in the countries from which immigrants come. We have the brain drain phenomenon
the fact that these countries are losing human resources at their most dynamic age, the cleverest, most spirited people, and it is very important for these countries to keep their human resources, which is also why our approach, especially with the Structural Funds, is to invest in human resources, especially at these ages."@en1
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