eliminating jobs only increases unemployment and poverty.
No. Poverty is not the lack of money. Poverty is not the lack of employment. Poverty is the lack of goods and/or services.
Creating jobs requires increasing work. Increasing work is accomplished by making it
more difficult to provide goods and services[1]. Why? Because the more difficult it is to provide goods and services, the more people are required to do the work to provide those goods and services. Creating jobs is fairly close to being the
opposite of eliminating poverty.
To eliminate poverty,
decrease the work requirements for providing goods and services so that it's
easier to provide those goods and services, so that there are more goods and services available for less effort.
Who is rich, and who is poor:
A) The person with a whole lot of money, but no job and no goods, and nobody providing service. For example: a guy alone on a desert island with a billion dollars in cash.
B) The person with a lot of work, but no money, no goods, and nobody providing service. For example, a guy alone on a desert island who spends 8 hours a day pushing a rock in in circles.
C) The guy with no money, no job...but sitting on that same desert island with all the food, clothes and toys he wants and with a bunch of people serving him?
Obviously, C is the "rich" one. Money and jobs don't make you rich. Giving somebody work does not help them. Giving them money does not help them. Giving them goods and services helps them. Yes, we happen to live in a society where people choose to give you goods and services in exchange for money....but that's a completely cultural phenomenon, and really has nothing to do with actual wealth.
Which of those guys do you want to be? A, B or C? I'll take C, please.
If C is the best scenario, how do we accomplish it? Do we accomplish it by "creating jobs?" No, of course not. Job creation is the result of having more work to be done, which is the result of goods and services being more difficult to provide, which is the opposite of what we want to accomplish. Do we accomplish it by printing more money? No, of course not. That simply devalues the currency and accomplishes nothing.
If we want people to have more goods and services...we accomplish that by making it
easier to provide those goods and services, which is essentially the same thing as
reducing work, which has the consequence of destroying jobs.
Creating jobs is not the solution. If you want people to have more goods and services, then make it easier to provide goods and services.
[1] Or by increasing desire or goods and services. This happens a lot in our society too.