I propose that the government organise a group of experts from existing civil servants to design the areas and modalities of public works as national economic projects. These are not political projects, but works that would contribute to the common good of all taxpayers. Each project should be led by a capable director, who will select the participants (new recruits to the specific project) primarily from the unemployed registered with the Employment Service (those receiving unemployment benefits) or currently unemployed. Each project should be managed as a kind of temporary undertaking to carry out the planned public works. When the project is finished, the company is either dissolved or a new project is taken over under the same conditions. The advantages would be huge. Work would be carried out which today the State does not have the means to do or which is not attractive to commercial contractors in terms of income. The unemployed would be employed and the State would not have to spend on compensation, or could do so at a reduced cost. I am thinking of projects in the fields of ecology, municipalities, maintenance of various state facilities, etc. They would not require tenders. The areas of public works would be defined by a group of experts formed at the outset and would become a regular activity of the State. Any benefit from this would reduce or even eliminate budgetary expenditure: - or to pay for the same goods to a market operator, who would use part of the revenue for his own profit and increase budgetary expenditure. In this case, budget expenditure would represent an outflow to the economy - or to reduce the costs of the unemployed (unemployment benefits would be eliminated) - budget expenditure would not increase the outflow from the budget, but would only be redistributed, while at the same time citizens would get a new good or an extra standard from these public works. And not least: unemployment would be reduced and at the same time the economic activity we so desperately need would be kick-started.