Assar Lindbeck: an appreciation
The Swedish economist’s life of rich activity straddled theory and policy—and painting.
The Swedish economist’s life of rich activity straddled theory and policy—and painting.
Despite increasing criticism of Big Tech, the business models of leading digital companies are still widely admired. That’s a problem.
The principle of a European minimum wage is established. How it should be set is not.
With employers on a decades-long offensive against labour, the balance of power which once secured social dialogue has been transformed.
Adam Tooze argues that worrying about the euro exchange rate and a non-existent inflation enemy in Europe must give way to fiscal and monetary demand boosts.
A green recovery from the pandemic would heal its social scars by quickly creating jobs and fostering inclusion.
After the summer holidays, schools across Europe have been fretting about if and when they will have to switch back to digital distance learning—but not in Estonia.
The coronavirus crisis has highlighted how the welfare state of the future must include the growing mass of precarious labour, especially among youth.
Lockdown conditions have put in question the disproportionate burden of unpaid work placed on women, evidence from Turkey shows.
Protecting the health and safety of all workers in the care economy is essential, but for this to become a reality major changes are needed.
If the sensitising impact of ‘Black Lives Matter’ is not to ebb, a new European narrative and concrete actions are needed.
Algorithmic systems are a new front line for unions as well as a challenge to workers’ rights to autonomy.
There’s time to avoid the carnage of employer-led restructuring following the pandemic—but only if workers and unions set the agenda.
At the height of the pandemic workers in critical occupations enjoyed nightly public applause. Now they need longer-term, concrete appreciation.
It is sometimes suggested social-democratic parties are torn between ‘communitarian’ workers and ‘cosmopolitan’ professionals—but it’s not so simple.
A new book turns away from the ‘demand side’ focus of much populism analysis to the ‘supply’ of a plutocratic, ever-more right-wing Republican party.
The travails of the US economy come amid a politics never so poisonous since the civil war.