The most frightening thing is not the UK government’s end-game strategy, Paul Mason writes. It’s that there isn’t one.
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Joe Biden should not miss the Bretton Woods moment
by Peter Bofinger on
Peter Bofinger argues the incoming president must abjure the mercantilist language of his predecessor in favour of a progressive response to globalisation.

The ‘circular economy’—neither safe nor sustainable
by Vera Weghmann on
The circular economy holds out the hope of living within the planet’s resources. Turning aspiration into action is another matter.

Seven ‘surprising’ facts about the Italian economy
by Philipp Heimberger and Nikolaus Krowall on
Why would affluent northern-European taxpayers want to pour money into an Italian economy that is a basket-case? Except it isn’t.

Capitalism’s triple crisis
by Mariana Mazzucato on
After the 2008 financial crisis, we learned the hard way what happens when governments flood the economy with unconditional liquidity, rather than laying the foundation for a sustainable and inclusive recovery.

The corona crisis will define our era
by Karin Pettersson on
Karin Pettersson writes that the pandemic has highlighted the frailties of a short-sighted and hyper-individualistic social system.
Politics

The Biden victory and the future of the centre-left
by EJ Dionne Jr on
Postwar global progress has hinged on a transatlantic alliance of progressive parties. The election in the United States potentially opens a new chapter.

The rule of law: a simple phrase with exacting demands
by Albena Azmanova and Kalypso Nicolaidis on
If the finger is to be pointed—rightly—at Hungary and Poland, then the EU must insist on compliance by all with universal norms.

Care, capitalism and politics
by Kathleen Lynch on
The coronavirus crisis has highlighted how the welfare state of the future must be built on an ethic of care rather than self-interest.

Barrelling towards the ‘Brexit’ cliff edge
by Paul Mason on
The most frightening thing is not the UK government’s end-game strategy, Paul Mason writes. It’s that there isn’t one.

Europe must stand up to Hungary and Poland
by George Soros on
The European Union cannot afford to compromise on the rule-of-law provisions it applies to the funds it allocates to member states.
Economy

Ensuring trade unions have a say in the transformation of work
By Richard Pond and Jan Willem Goudriaan
Digitalisation is a key issue in public services. Workers must have a role, via their unions, to maximise its benefits and minimise its risks.

Gig-life balance?
Impossible hours carved out by apps have often been presented as if self-determined ‘flexibility’ on the part of workers.

An international governance system for digital labour platforms
By Thorben Albrecht, Kostas Papadakis and Maria Mexi
Cross-border social dialogue could pave the way to international regulation of a key feature of the 21st-century world of work.

Light in the tunnel or oncoming train?
By Adam Tooze
Adam Tooze argues that the frail eurozone recovery hinges entirely on its guarantee by the European Central Bank.

Breaking the impasse on corporate taxation
By Liina Carr
As Europe’s exchequers go deep into the red due to the pandemic, a co-ordinated approach to corporate taxation is ever-more urgent.
Society

Designing vaccines for people, not profits
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?
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
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
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
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
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
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
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.





