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Central Banks Warm To Collective Bargaining

Ronald Janssen

Something peculiar is happening. Up until recently, many central bankers were looking at robust collective bargaining and wage formation systems as a possible source for

The Brexit Referendum: Provincial England Versus London And The Celts

Peter Kellner

For a great many voters, the side they will end up taking in the referendum will be a verdict on the kind of country we

The European Pillar of Social Rights – no ‘social triple A’ for Europe

Daniel Seikel

Shortly after his appointment, the new President of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, promised to strengthen the social dimension of the European Union. The so-called

Time For Common Sense On Negative Interest Rates

John Kay

This was to have been the year of exit from quantitative easing. Instead, 2016 is going to be the year of negative interest rates. For more

Reckoning With Inequality

Jeffrey Frankel

When it comes to the rise in economic inequality since the 1970s in the United States and some other advanced economies, it doesn’t really matter

Brexit’s Questions For The Rest Of Europe

Javier Solana

In three months, British citizens will have to decide whether or not to remain in the European Union. But they are not the only ones

Bias And Ill-will: The Poverty Of Today’s Historians

Branko Milanovic

Living in a post-modern city like New York has many advantages but some disadvantages too. Among the latter is the absence of bookstores. Practically the

Bernie Slanders: How The Democratic Party Establishment Suffocates Progressive Change

Thomas Palley

The Democratic Party establishment has recently found itself discomforted by Senator Bernie Sanders’ campaign to return the party to its modern roots of New Deal

Why The World Economy Needs Fiscal Policy To Overcome Stagnation

Barry Eichengreen

The world economy is visibly sinking, and the policymakers who are supposed to be its stewards are tying themselves in knots. Or so suggest the

Why Global Inequality Matters

Branko Milanovic

Let me start by enquiring about the importance assumed by inequality in the public debate during these last years. As we know, inequality has been

How Political Elites Have Failed To Ensure Social Justice Across Generations

Joseph Stiglitz

Something interesting has emerged in voting patterns on both sides of the Atlantic: Young people are voting in ways that are markedly different from their

EU-Turkey ‘Agreement’ On Syrian Refugees: An Illegal And Shameful Deal

Mehmet Ugur

I used to enjoy researching European integration because the subject struck me as a rich laboratory for distilling evidence on the dark undersides of national

Greek Pensions: Tsipras’ Last Ditch Fight Versus Troika

Marcello Minenna

The Troika is in Athens and will not leave without deep cuts to pensions, even though the country is back in recession. Far from last summer’s media

A Visegrad Plan For Rebuilding European Cohesion

Lubomír Zaorálek

In February 1991, presidents of three nascent European democracies convened at a castle near Budapest to proclaim their common desire to return to Europe. The

A British Departure From The EU Would Have Major Consequences For Ireland

Paul Gillespie

The UK’s referendum on EU membership will be keenly observed by Irish citizens, given the close ties between the two countries. Paul Gillespie writes that a Brexit

What The New French Labour Law Tells Us About France And The Euro

Robert Hancké

A new labour law, commonly referred to as the ‘El Khomri law’ after the French Minister of Labour, Myriam El Khomri, has generated significant attention

The ‘Tax Shift’: A Surrealist Fantasy

Jan Drahokoupil

Reducing taxes on labour – personal income taxes and employers’ and employees’ social security contributions – is often seen as key to increasing employment levels. The latest crop of

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S&D Group in the European Parliament Advertisement

S&D Housing Storytelling

Europeans are struggling with rising housing and rental costs, and we have been working in various ways to address this, because we believe a home is a right for everyone.
 Recently, we travelled across Europe to hear directly from people who struggle to afford a decent place to live. They shared a glimpse of how the housing crisis has affected their lives and why having a home is so important to them. Take a moment to check out their stories. They remind us why it is so urgent to act.

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New Edition - Social policy in the European Union: state of play 2025

Can Europe preserve its distinctive social model while simultaneously rearming, reindustrialising, and reorganising its economy in a more conflictual and competitive world? This is the central question raised in this new edition of the Bilan social, a reference publication released every spring for more than 25 years by the European Trade Union Institute (ETUI) and the European Social Observatory (OSE).

READ HERE
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Is financial resilience and trust in Europe faltering?

In this episode of Eurofound Talks, host Mary McCaughey and senior researcher Eszter Sandor unpack the results of the 2025 Living and Working in the EU e-survey. While headline inflation has stabilised at 2.1%, the data reveals a continent gripped by chronic precariousness, with 57% of respondents now at risk of depression. Mary and Eszter explore how this economic insecurity is impacting institutional trust and democratic engagement.

LISTEN HERE
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Read the book "The open future and its enemies" 

A robust democracy must not leave the future in the hands of the alliance between Big Tech and the far right. AI must be politically reined in and democratically shaped so that humanity retains its sovereignty.

Artificial intelligence is regarded as the driving force of progress. Yet it has long since become a challenge to democracy. The book argues that uncontrolled AI will erode our freedom, self-determination and democracy.

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Hans Böckler Stiftung Advertisement

WSI Minimum Wage Report 2026

Minimum wage policy across Europe has shifted significantly, with many EU countries raising wages above average and anchoring them to adequate living standards. This trend is consolidating as countries increasingly adopt the reference values recommended in the European Minimum Wage Directive — recently upheld by the European Court of Justice.

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FES Advertisement

“What is the actual purpose of the state?” – this central question is the focus of the analysis. At a time when bureaucratic processes are making life difficult for citizens, the paper proposes a three-part model. It aims at a conception of the state as a platform that helps society build the capabilities it needs to address its problems effectively.

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