The UK’s European question is far from over
‘Brexit’ stemmed from the takeover of the Tory party by its Eurosceptic fringe, whose prejudices will now collide with reality.
‘Brexit’ stemmed from the takeover of the Tory party by its Eurosceptic fringe, whose prejudices will now collide with reality.
National governments had been choosing not to exercise enormous powers so those globalisation had enriched could exercise their own.
Thomas Piketty tells Robin Wilson how wealth and power can be transferred from capital to workers and citizens.
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.
Sheri Berman argues that the embourgeoisement of centre-left parties has fostered a crisis of representation, at the heart of democratic dissatisfaction.
The international system for business taxation is starting to crumble. Now is the time for civil society to apply pressure.
At least as important is the reform of the procedure for preventing and correcting macroeconomic imbalances.
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 transformation of work is not simply from jobs to automation. Its complex, variable character demands a matching policy portfolio.
Without major reform of the EU fiscal framework, Peter Bofinger argues, public investment will be insufficient in the wake of the pandemic.
Attention across the world to the US elections has focused only on the federal level. But the battle for the statehouses mattered too.
The pandemic has highlighted how public health and workers’ safety are closely intertwined.
A workable asylum policy in line with European values could be pursued by a Schengen-style coalition of the willing.
Autonomous unions, allied with trade union confederations, have shown how collective bargaining can be won by the precariat which employers seek to fragment.
While the negotiators haggle over a deal to avoid a new-year car crash, the fundamental problem is the obsolete notion of sovereignty held in London.
While some talk of ‘deglobalisation’, Branko Milanovic argues that the pandemic will push forward the globalisation of labour.
The huge fiscal pressures occasioned by the pandemic mean global tax-gaming by corporations and the wealthy is a luxury we can no longer afford.