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A capital idea: corporate taxation in a globalised era

US election 2020

The transformation of work

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Capital and ideology: interview with Thomas Piketty

Capital and ideology: interview with Thomas Piketty

by Thomas Piketty on 23rd December 2020

Thomas Piketty tells Robin Wilson how wealth and power can be transferred from capital to workers and citizens.

New forms of employment in Europe—how new is new?

New forms of employment in Europe—how new is new?

by Irene Mandl on 15th December 2020

Standard employment is not simply being replaced by non-standard work. But work is becoming more diverse and policy must accordingly become more tailored.

The first global event in the history of humankind

The first global event in the history of humankind

by Branko Milanovic on 7th December 2020

While some talk of ‘deglobalisation’, Branko Milanovic argues that the pandemic will push forward the globalisation of labour.

The Biden victory and the future of the centre-left

The Biden victory and the future of the centre-left

by EJ Dionne Jr on 4th December 2020

Postwar global progress has hinged on a transatlantic alliance of progressive parties. The election in the United States potentially opens a new chapter.

Designing vaccines for people, not profits

Designing vaccines for people, not profits

by Mariana Mazzucato, Henry Lishi Li and Els Torreele on 2nd December 2020

For all the hope spurred by the efficacy announcements of multiple Covid-19 vaccine candidates, national and private interests are trumping health justice.

Light in the tunnel or oncoming train?

Light in the tunnel or oncoming train?

by Adam Tooze on 30th November 2020

Adam Tooze argues that the frail eurozone recovery hinges entirely on its guarantee by the European Central Bank.

Politics

Border pushbacks: it’s time for impunity to end

Border pushbacks: it’s time for impunity to end

by Hope Barker on 23rd December 2020

Research on pushbacks of asylum-seekers reveals a massive number of such human-rights violations—yet it could be just the tip of the iceberg.

European values: making reputational damage stick

European values: making reputational damage stick

by Michele Bellini and Francesco Saraceno on 22nd December 2020

The threat to veto EU financing arrangements if tied to the rule of law is gone—but the elephant is still in the room.

Closing the representation gap

Closing the representation gap

by Sheri Berman on 21st December 2020

Sheri Berman argues that the embourgeoisement of centre-left parties has fostered a crisis of representation, at the heart of democratic dissatisfaction.

Corporate taxation—momentum is building

Corporate taxation—momentum is building

by Nicholas Shaxson on 21st December 2020

The international system for business taxation is starting to crumble. Now is the time for civil society to apply pressure.

A green recovery needs new politics

A green recovery needs new politics

by Jon Bloomfield and Fred Steward on 14th December 2020

Europe is moving on to green and social-democratic terrain. But German Christian democracy and French centrism are taking it there.

Economy

Capital and ideology: interview with Thomas Piketty

Capital and ideology: interview with Thomas Piketty

23rd December 2020 By Thomas Piketty

Thomas Piketty tells Robin Wilson how wealth and power can be transferred from capital to workers and citizens.

Gig workers’ rights and their strategic litigation

Gig workers’ rights and their strategic litigation

22nd December 2020 By Aude Cefaliello and Nicola Countouris

A window of opportunity has opened up to utilise EU law on health and safety to advance the rights of ‘gig’ workers in domestic courts.

Telework during the Covid-19 crisis: new reality, old questions

Telework during the Covid-19 crisis: new reality, old questions

18th December 2020 By Marta Fana, Enrique Fernández-Macías, Ignacio González-Vázquez, Santo Milasi and Joanna Napierala

Teleworking has surged during the pandemic. New forms of autonomy have been glimpsed, as well as new forms of control.

Social Europe on the wrong track?

Social Europe on the wrong track?

18th December 2020 By Livia Spera, Luca Visentini, Roman Hebenstreit and Wolfgang Katzian

The Dobersberger case proved that some workers could be more equal than others.

Eurozone reform—it’s not just the fiscal rules

Eurozone reform—it’s not just the fiscal rules

17th December 2020 By Willi Koll

At least as important is the reform of the procedure for preventing and correcting macroeconomic imbalances.

Society

Designing vaccines for people, not profits

Designing vaccines for people, not profits

2nd December 2020 By Mariana Mazzucato, Henry Lishi Li and Els Torreele

For all the hope spurred by the efficacy announcements of multiple Covid-19 vaccine candidates, national and private interests are trumping health justice.

Not part of Europe anyway?

Not part of Europe anyway?

30th November 2020 By James Wickham

The language of the Brexit stand-off is of a ‘level playing-field’ versus ‘sovereignty’. But beneath that, it’s about divergent social models.

Care, capitalism and politics

Care, capitalism and politics

26th November 2020 By Kathleen Lynch

The coronavirus crisis has highlighted how the welfare state of the future must be built on an ethic of care rather than self-interest.

Greater equality: our guide through Covid-19 to sustainable wellbeing

Greater equality: our guide through Covid-19 to sustainable wellbeing

25th November 2020 By Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson

The pandemic has reinforced the case for egalitarianism to define the ethos of the welfare state.

Ecology

Legal hurdles facing a green and just transition

Legal hurdles facing a green and just transition

24th November 2020 By Ingo Venzke

The irony of genuinely ‘free trade’ is only regulation enables it. Europe cannot lead the ecological transition without recognising this.

How public development banks can help nature

How public development banks can help nature

17th November 2020 By Elizabeth Mrema and Carlos Manuel Rodriguez

Public development banks will be critical to global efforts to ‘build back better’. They should complement their climate investments with nature-based goals.

Trade unions and climate change: the jobs-versus-environment dilemma

Trade unions and climate change: the jobs-versus-environment dilemma

12th November 2020 By Adrien Thomas and Nadja Dörflinger

Unions can be torn between mitigating climate change tomorrow and saving jobs today. A significant Just Transition Fund could ease that dilemma.

Supporting the transition to post-pandemic sustainability

Supporting the transition to post-pandemic sustainability

9th November 2020 By Denis Gregory and Maarten van Klaveren

Executive remuneration packages not only drive a race to the top but do not account for companies’ environmental ‘externalities’. This needs to change.

Hans Böckler Stiftung Advertisement

The macroeconomic effects of the EU recovery and resilience facility

This policy brief analyses the macroeconomic effects of the EU's Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF). We present the basics of the RRF and then use the macroeconometric multi-country model NiGEM to analyse the facility's macroeconomic effects. The simulations show, first, that if the funds are in fact used to finance additional public investment (as intended), public capital stocks throughout the EU will increase markedly during the time of the RRF. Secondly, in some especially hard-hit southern European countries, the RRF would offset a significant share of the output lost during the pandemic. Thirdly, as gains in GDP due to the RRF will be much stronger in (poorer) southern and eastern European countries, the RRF has the potential to reduce economic divergence. Finally, and in direct consequence of the increased GDP, the RRF will lead to lower public debt ratios—between 2.0 and 4.4 percentage points below baseline for southern European countries in 2023.


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ETUI advertisement

Benchmarking Working Europe 2020

A virus is haunting Europe. This year’s 20th anniversary issue of our flagship publication Benchmarking Working Europe brings to a growing audience of trade unionists, industrial relations specialists and policy-makers a warning: besides SARS-CoV-2, ‘austerity’ is the other nefarious agent from which workers, and Europe as a whole, need to be protected in the months and years ahead. Just as the scientific community appears on the verge of producing one or more effective and affordable vaccines that could generate widespread immunity against SARS-CoV-2, however, policy-makers, at both national and European levels, are now approaching this challenging juncture in a way that departs from the austerity-driven responses deployed a decade ago, in the aftermath of the previous crisis. It is particularly apt for the 20th anniversary issue of Benchmarking, a publication that has allowed the ETUI and the ETUC to contribute to key European debates, to set out our case for a socially responsive and ecologically sustainable road out of the Covid-19 crisis.


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Eurofound advertisement

Industrial relations: developments 2015-2019

Eurofound has monitored and analysed developments in industrial relations systems at EU level and in EU member states for over 40 years. This new flagship report provides an overview of developments in industrial relations and social dialogue in the years immediately prior to the Covid-19 outbreak. Findings are placed in the context of the key developments in EU policy affecting employment, working conditions and social policy, and linked to the work done by social partners—as well as public authorities—at European and national levels.


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Foundation for European Progressive Studies Advertisement

Read FEPS Covid Response Papers

In this moment, more than ever, policy-making requires support and ideas to design further responses that can meet the scale of the problem. FEPS contributes to this reflection with policy ideas, analysis of the different proposals and open reflections with the new FEPS Covid Response Papers series and the FEPS Covid Response Webinars. The latest FEPS Covid Response Paper by the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, 'Recovering from the pandemic: an appraisal of lessons learned', provides an overview of the failures and successes in dealing with Covid-19 and its economic aftermath. Among the authors: Lodewijk Asscher, László Andor, Estrella Durá, Daniela Gabor, Amandine Crespy, Alberto Botta, Francesco Corti, and many more.


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Social Europe Publishing book

The Brexit endgame is upon us: deal or no deal, the transition period will end on January 1st. With a pandemic raging, for those countries most affected by Brexit the end of the transition could not come at a worse time. Yet, might the UK's withdrawal be a blessing in disguise? With its biggest veto player gone, might the European Pillar of Social Rights take centre stage? This book brings together leading experts in European politics and policy to examine social citizenship rights across the European continent in the wake of Brexit. Will member states see an enhanced social Europe or a race to the bottom?

'This book correctly emphasises the need to place the future of social rights in Europe front and centre in the post-Brexit debate, to move on from the economistic bias that has obscured our vision of a progressive social Europe.' Michael D Higgins, president of Ireland


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