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Common Rules (Not Rates) Should Be The Answer To Tax Competition In The EU

Peter Dietsch

Tax avoidance is a key problem for European countries, with the EU taking several steps to try and limit the ability of businesses to shift

Can The West Deal With The Refugee Crisis?

Robert Skidelsky

The tragic exodus of people from war-torn Syria and surrounding countries challenges the world’s reason and sympathy. Since 2011, some four million people have fled

Europe’s Bad Example In The Refugee Crisis

Peter Sutherland

The death toll resulting from Europe’s paralysis in responding to the influx of refugees from the Middle East and Africa continues to rise. Hundreds of

Why The Move Towards A Cashless Society Is Bad News For Criminals

John Kay

Last week I left home without my wallet. I soon realised it did not really matter. I could even manage without a plastic card. My

How Edmund Phelps Got It Wrong On Greek Austerity

Achim Truger

In the debate on the Greek crisis, no cliché was too tawdry to be used and no claim too stupid or false to be made

Can We Stop The Fragmentation Of Europe?

Kemal Dervis

The European Union’s economic crises of the last half-decade have fueled the emergence of a deep divide between the northern creditor countries and the southern

Fraud, Fools, And Financial Markets

Robert Shiller

Adam Smith famously wrote of the “invisible hand,” by which individuals’ pursuit of self-interest in free, competitive markets advances the interest of society as a

A Nail-biting Exercise For Alexis Tsipras

Robert Misik

We’re sitting on the roof terrace of a restaurant at the foot of the Acropolis, with the brightly lit temple above us. But the mood

Why The EU Should Consider Decriminalising People Smuggling

Mollie Gerver

EU member states agreed on 14 September to strengthen actions against people smugglers in the Mediterranean as part of their response to the ongoing migration

The Changing Climate On Climate Change

Gro Harlem Brundtland

In the early 1990s, when I was Prime Minister of Norway, I once found myself debating sustainable development with an opposition leader who insisted that

Why In The Digital Economy Workers Should Own More Company Shares

Richard Freeman

Richard B. Freeman, Herbert Ascherman Professor of Economics at Harvard University and Co-Director of the Labor and Worklife Program at Harvard Law School, joins Social

Why Germany Needs A Discussion About Islamophobia

Astrid Bötticher

While Germany has witnessed public displays of support for refugees during the refugee crisis, this year has also seen the rise of anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim

How Uber Could Be Part Of The Solution 21st Century Transportation

Steven Hill

Uber and Big Taxi are at loggerheads in Europe and all over the world, with battle lines drawn and the public and politicians taking sides.

The Refugee Crisis, Immanuel Kant And Germany’s Moral Leadership

Yanis Varoufakis

Economists err when they think that human rationality is all about applying one’s means efficiently in order to achieve one’s ends. That the efficient application

Ten Dollars A Week Can Keep A Refugee Child Off The Streets

Gordon Brown

Just days ago, Abdul al-Kader, his four-year-old daughter, Abdelillah, draped over his shoulders, was photographed standing at a dangerous intersection in Beirut, trying to sell

Policy Credibility, Market Confidence And The Private Sector

Iyanatul Islam

The notion of the credibility of policy-makers and how that creates incentives for the private sector to consume, save, invest and innovate is at the

Eastern Europe’s Crisis Of Shame

Jan T. Gross

As thousands of refugees pour into Europe to escape the horrors of war, with many dying along the way, a different sort of tragedy has

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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.

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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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