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Tuesday, May 22nd 2012


A Different Recovery

A Different Recovery

Pervenche Berès MEP is Chair of the Employment and Social Affairs Committee of the European Parliament. She spoke at the TASC conference in October.

Economic recovery is still just a future prospect. We are nowhere near an exit from the crisis, and the risk of a double dip recession should be seriously considered.”

Now, I would like to express to you my view on the recovery process we have to propose to EU citizens to ensure a fair way out of the crisis or as I prefer to call it a proper entry strategy in the new sustainable and solidar development model we need to look for.

The crisis is not over in Europe. In fact, conservative governments are doing everything they can to get it to last for longer.

Let me just remind you some essential figures that illustrate the gravity of the current situation:

  • by the end of the year, 25 million European citizens will be unemployed in Europe and 8 million of them lost their job due to the crisis.
  • Unemployment continues to increase: over 10% now.
  • Markets are still nervous – more than a month after the decisive plan adopted in May for the Eurozone, the Euro was down, around $1.20. It lost 20% of its value since the beginning of the year. In September, the Euro was up again, and is now around 1.40 Dollar

Public finances must be a concern to us all. But excessive cuts mean killing the recovery before it even start, and it does not prevent your country from being downgraded!

We must pay careful attention that the austerity programmes do not aggravate the social hardship by making cuts in the social security systems.

When austerity measures now are implemented by countries in relatively good economic health (e.g. Germany), one must ask if these measures are nothing less than a conservative assault on the welfare state.

The European Parliament proposes a real and appropriate alternative on economic governance. The European Parliament sent on Wednesday [20 October 2010 -- Tombuktu] a strong signal to EU citizens by adopting at an overwhelming majority a report on the economic, financial and social crisis. I do not think that, in Europe, members of the Parliament and Mr. Barroso and Mr. Rehn have the same understanding of the economic governance. They still address, in their public statements, their vision of economic governance. We say that economic governance should be an instrument for the success of a fair and sustainable strategy.

Her full paper is here.

The European Parliament’s report on the financial, economic and social crisis is here.

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Sins of the Father

Sins of the Father:

Tracing the Decisions

That Shaped the Irish Economy,

by Conor McCabe

from The History Press

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