The global economy is recovering – although the younger you are and the longer you’ve been out of work, the less likely it is that you’ll have noticed.

More than 50 per cent of young Spaniards and Greeks are out of work

A modest upturn in the major developed economies flagged last week by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development should be a considerable relief for Western countries still struggling to run down huge debts.

But with persistent recession across Europe and high levels of youth unemployment and long-term joblessness, signs that growth is picking up may offer little cheer.

“The rise of long-term unemployment, with more of the unemployed moving off unemployment insurance onto less-generous social benefits, is worsening poverty and inequality,” the OECD said on Thursday, adding the issue was especially bad in Europe.

The consequent drain on demand could hinder recoveries before they reach what some economists call ‘escape velocity’, and policymakers are starting to fret that the longer high joblessness persists, the harder it becomes to solve the problem.

More than 40 per cent of US unemployed have been out of work for more than six months, almost double the previous post-World War II record.

Even news on Tuesday of falling registered jobless in employment blackspot Spain may reflect more darkness than light, with economists at Citi saying the decline in March resulted from a tightening of the criteria for accessing benefits.

There is particular anxiety among policymakers – and increasingly global investors – that leaving hordes of youths without work even after a turn in the economic cycle could threaten social and political stability in many economies.

A growing amount of investment research in recent weeks has homed in on the problem, making links with the huge anti-establishment vote in Italy‘s election in February and even the conditions that triggered the ‘Arab Spring’ uprisings in 2011.

“The rising trend of youth unemployment around the world threatens not just current economic growth, but also political stability and the potential demographic dividend,” according to a Credit Suisse report last month.

That “demographic dividend” – which CS claims explained 44 per cent of the rise in per capita output in developing Asia in the 30 years to 2000 – tends to kick in as the number of young workers swells relative to their older and younger dependents.

But it hinges on high levels of labour force participation, meaning potential gains may be evaporating as growing numbers of those in the 15-24 age bracket are left idle.

With International Labour Organisation data showing worldwide youth unemployment at 12.7 per cent – or 74.6 million people – in 2012, up about one percentage point from pre-crisis levels, the global problem is pretty clear.

Rather ominously, the region most driven by social and political unrest over the past two years – the Middle East and North Africa – had youth unemployment rates of more than twice the world average in 2012.

Developed economies and the European Union came next, with an average young jobless rate of 18 per cent.

Recent official statistics show that more than 50 per cent of young Spaniards and Greeks are out of work, and more than 30 per cent in Italy, the highest among the Group of Seven nations. Bailed-out Ireland and Portugal also have youth unemployment running at more than 30 per cent.

Youth joblessness across the eurozone has been more than twice the overall unemployment rate, while the connection between lack of work and inequality can be seen in Eurostat data showing a rising proportion of 15-24-year-olds at risk of poverty and social exclusion during the six years to 2011.

Neither is the problem solely European. The last time US youth unemployment was below 10 per cent was at the height of the dot.com boom in 2000, while it reached 17 per cent in 2011.

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