Social Europe

politics, economy and employment & labour

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Just transition

Artificial intelligence, work and society

Europe 2025

Columns & Interviews

Challenging patents key to make Covid-19 vaccine work for all

Challenging patents key to make Covid-19 vaccine work for all

by Kateřina Konečná on 2nd July 2020

Finding a vaccine against the coronavirus is a biochemical challenge. Ensuring universal access to it, however, is a political choice.

The EU is muddling through another crisis—which may be good enough

The EU is muddling through another crisis—which may be good enough

by Peter Verovšek on 2nd July 2020

The divisions exposed by the coronavirus have reopened fundamental questions about the ultimate aims of the EU. But now is not the time the answer them.

No more free-lunch bailouts

No more free-lunch bailouts

by Mariana Mazzucato and Andreo Andreoni on 1st July 2020

With governments spending on a massive scale to mitigate the economic fallout from Covid-19, they should be positioning their economies for a more sustainable future.

Emerging stronger from the crisis

Emerging stronger from the crisis

by Andrew Watt on 1st July 2020

Europe needs to do more at federal level if a recovery plan is to be successful.

Technological sovereignty—and a sepia-image Britain

Technological sovereignty—and a sepia-image Britain

by Paul Mason on 30th June 2020

Paul Mason bemoans how ‘Brexit’ has left the UK a beached whale in a world in need of technological regulation driven by European values.

The Main Street manifesto

The Main Street manifesto

by Nouriel Roubini on 30th June 2020

The historic protests which have swept America were long overdue, not just as a response to racism and police violence but also as a revolt against entrenched plutocracy.

Rekindled north-south stereotypes are harmful for the European project

Rekindled north-south stereotypes are harmful for the European project

by Maria Petmesidou and Ana Guillén on 25th June 2020

Underlying the divisions bedeviling a recovery from the pandemic are stereotypes echoing those which emerged during the eurozone crisis.

A new social contract

A new social contract

by Sharan Burrow on 24th June 2020

The 2020 ITUC Global Rights Index exposes the failings of the world’s economic model—a new social contract can help us build a new one.

Explaining artificial intelligence in human-centred terms

Explaining artificial intelligence in human-centred terms

by Martin Schüßler on 24th June 2020

Since AI involves interactions between machines and humans—rather than just the former replacing the latter—’explainable AI’ is a new challenge.

Yes, someone is to blame

Yes, someone is to blame

by James K Galbraith and Albena Azmanova on 23rd June 2020

A pandemic may be represented as a ‘natural disaster’. A global depression is however the product of ideology and powerful political actors.

Protests, the left and the power of democracy

Protests, the left and the power of democracy

by Sheri Berman on 22nd June 2020

Sheri Berman urges the American left not to squander the sea-change in public opinion of recent weeks by only preaching to the converted.

Pandemic deepens social and political cleavages

Pandemic deepens social and political cleavages

by Peter Hall and Rosemary Taylor on 22nd June 2020

The coronavirus crisis has inflamed cleavages in democratic societies which will be difficult to heal.

Welfare states need reinforcement, not reinvention

Welfare states need reinforcement, not reinvention

by Silja Häusermann and Jane Gingrich on 18th June 2020

Old ideas about welfare are not broken—but the politics sustaining them is in peril.

Social commons: the social protection we want

Social commons: the social protection we want

by Francine Mestrum on 18th June 2020

Universal basic income would offer a deadweight subsidy to low-paying employers. The route to security for all lies in the concept of ‘social commons’.

Blogs

Let this time be different!

Let this time be different!

by Kajsa Borgnäs on 29th June 2020

Europe needs a green industrial recovery strategy to exit the pandemic.

Seven ‘surprising’ facts about the Italian economy

Seven ‘surprising’ facts about the Italian economy

by Philipp Heimberger and Nikolaus Krowall on 25th June 2020

Why would affluent northern-European taxpayers want to pour money into an Italian economy that is a basket-case? Except it isn’t.

Covid-19 fallout takes higher toll on women

Covid-19 fallout takes higher toll on women

by Massimiliano Mascherini and Martina Bisello on 23rd June 2020

While women appear to be more resilient than men to Covid-19 in terms of health outcomes, that is not the case when it comes to the economic and social fallout.

Europe needs a new Youth Guarantee

Europe needs a new Youth Guarantee

by Dennis Tamesberger and Johann Bacher on 16th June 2020

The Youth Guarantee has failed to deliver on its promise. The deepening economic crisis makes a well-functioning guarantee even more imperative.

The Covid-19 crisis: inflationary or deflationary?

The Covid-19 crisis: inflationary or deflationary?

by Peter Bofinger on 15th June 2020

Peter Bofinger warns especially German inflation-phobes that deflation is a greater downside risk in the aftermath of the pandemic.

ETUI Advertisement

Essential but unprotected: highly mobile workers in the EU during the Covid-19 pandemic

Zane Rasnača

The pandemic has shown highly mobile workers are irreplaceable during a public-health crisis yet often remain the least protected. EU law has failed to protect them and guidance and policy actions by the European Commission have failed them too. A significant (upwards) convergence of social and labour law standards is needed. A pan-European social safety net for crisis situations should be created and targeted emergency measures adopted.


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Eurofound Advertisement

Living and working in Europe 2019

Living and working in Europe, Eurofound’s 2019 yearbook, provides a snapshot of the latest developments in the work and lives of Europeans as explored in the agency’s research activities over the course of 2019. The range of topics as a result is broad, from the growing diversity of employment across EU regions to rising trust in national institutions to developments in minimum wages. This overview also describes how Eurofound's activities connect with the policy priorities of the European Commission.


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Social Europe Volume Two

Social Europe Volume Two

This book brings to you some of the best contributions published on Social Europe over the second half of 2019 in easily accessible ebook and paperback formats. The collection is newly edited with a thematic focus on the rise of populism and also includes in text-form previously unpublished material from Social Europe Podcast. This second volume brings together contributions by Cas Mudde, Dani Rodrik, Peter Verovsek, Branko Milanovic, Sheri Berman, Paul Mason, Bela Galgoczi, Mariana Mazzucato and Ngaire Woods.


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Social Europe Edition Book

Zygmunt Bauman was a towering intellectual who saw and analysed – right up to his death in early 2017 – the great socio-political changes, often convulsive, in modern western society long before his peers. Here we highlight his prescient insights into what he dubbed ‘liquid modernity’ with 24 chapters on topics ranging from online loneliness via precarity/poverty/inequality to migration, fear of the ‘Other’ and the decline of the nation state. Chronicle of Crisis, 2011-16, written by one of the great chroniclers of our times, will be read and re-read for decades and more to come.


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Hans Böckler Stiftung Ad

For a Sound Fiscal Policy

The public sector in Germany has massively neglected its investments in the past two decades. The result is a public capital stock that does not meet the requirements of a modern economy and is inadequate to meet the challenges posed by the imminent demographic change and the international commitments for decarbonisation. If the requirements in the areas of education, transport, communication networks and decarbonisation are added together, the additional public investment or public investment promotion required over the next 10 years is around €450 billion, i.e. around €45 billion per year. From a macroeconomic perspective, this amount can be shouldered well, but it is unrealistic to finance these investments solely by redeploying funds in existing budgets. For this reason, the debt rules in the Germen constitution should be extended to include a golden rule allowing borrowing to the extent of net investment. Until such a rule is implemented, room for manoeuvre should be used, for example through extra-budgetary entities. It is also important to provide sustainable debt relief for municipalities, which play a central role in public investment, especially in transport infrastructure.


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