There has been an increasingly rapid streamlining and automation in working life for several decades. In addition, many unskilled jobs are transferred to low-wage countries.
We do not need to passively accept these causes of general burnout and unemployment.
Expand the public sector so that jobs can be created for different graduates. Most academic degrees, I would say all, are useful to the general public, even if on superficial inspection they seem a little odd and eccentric. A friend e.g. who are historians of ideas have a considerably more solid social analysis than most national economists.
Also expand the public sector to let the increasing hundreds of millions and billions of profits go to the people and not just the top one percent.
Expand the public sector to bring unemployment down to the point where the job buyers have no shirt stock of reserve unemployed that the job buyers can threaten to replace their workers with to stress them out.
Expand the public sector because it is unworthy not to take advantage of people's talents. Create jobs for both for everyone with or without post-secondary education.
Raise the tax to the level it was at before the Alliance victory in 2006. People lived well even then. Then we would certainly be able to afford to expand the public sector considerably. Investigations by the Riksdag's economists show that the cost of hiring more people in the public sector will be almost minimal as it simultaneously reduces the costs for the unemployed and probably leads to fewer people being burned out as the staff density increases.
A large public sector is a way of redistributing society's wealth that is beneficial to the public and also to companies so that everyone can contribute to keeping consumption and growth going. When the rich get money, they don't consume more, but hoard. Accumulations of money are taken out of consumption and threaten growth. At the same time, companies need roads, housing that workers can move into, a well-educated and healthy workforce. People just don't get healthier by getting the healthcare they need, but also by a rich cultural offer.