Almost-new fiscal rules for an old Europe
The proposed new fiscal rules may represent modest steps from the status quo. But they are in the right direction.
The proposed new fiscal rules may represent modest steps from the status quo. But they are in the right direction.
‘National security’ has become the new excuse to spy on political opponents and journalists in Europe.
Belgian trade union confederations this week led strikes and other actions to challenge the impact of inflation on purchasing power.
Europe needs to move from fear of the ‘moral hazard’ of fiscal co-operation to confidence in its collective benefits.
In a Europe of increasingly non-standard employment, social protection for all is more rather than less imperative.
The fiscal rules have been in abeyance with the pandemic. What will replace them is up for grabs.
As a much-touted green alliance of financial institutions crumbles, the private sector has once again proved unequal to the task of climate leadership.
COP27 in Sharm El Sheikh is now open but the European Union does not seem to have the will to achieve serious goals.
In the neoliberal era, economics marginalised the social sciences. But, Sheri Berman writes, only politics can tame capitalism’s chaotic gyrations.
As COP27 opens in Egypt while famine sweeps Somalia, an outcome-based approach to climate change must replace the appearance of action.
It will take more than sustainable-finance rules to summon the investment required for the socio-ecological transformation.
The European Commission’s initiative on long-term care addresses disability yet ignores key aspects of international law.
Europe can replace all Russian fossil-fuel imports with clean solutions by 2025—but only if it avoids the coal trap.
While Jair Bolsonaro has been voted out of office, the forces that empowered him retain considerable influence.
Are statutory minimum wages or collective-bargaining coverage the answer to low pay? Both, actually.
In a world of interlocking crises, Jayati Ghosh finds an antidote to despair in the potential of mobilisation for a new eco-social contract.
The Green Deal assumes economic growth can be ‘decoupled’ from ecological damage. That’s wishful thinking.