Author: Francine (page 44 of 90)

Demystifying Bretton Wood’s discourse on public services

Drawing on the specific case of IMF and World Bank’s response to the multiple crisis triggered by the pandemic, a journal article shows that there is a discourse-practice disjuncture in the Bretton Woods institutions approach to public services as they continue to favour austerity and market-oriented solutions for the delivery of public services. The article therefore seeks to demystify the institutions rhetoric and demand the adoption of a different way of understanding public services, and social policy more broadly.

Read Eurodad’s article

2023: A more just world is still possible

Eurodad Director Jean Saldanha looks forward to the challenges and solutions in 2023.

2023: A more just world is still possible – Eurodad

Making labour law fit for all those who work

EU anti-discrimination law applies to all ‘personal work’, the Court of Justice has ruled.

Read the Social Europe article

ILO Recommendation on Social Protection Floors: Can we overestimate its importance?

Interesting reflections from the Global Coalition for Social Protection Floors:

Social Protection on Tumblr

Inequality, once again…

The new Oxfam report on the growing gap between rich and poor

Survival of the Richest: How we must tax the super-rich now to fight inequality (oi-files-d8-prod.s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com)

Higher wages will solve the cost of living and jobs crises

ITUC’s annual World Economic and Social Outlook suggests that:

  •  The Ukraine conflict, an uneven recovery from the pandemic and ongoing bottlenecks in supply chains have created the conditions for stagflation in 2023.
  •  The absence of increases in labour incomes have created a cost-of-living crisis that threatens the livelihoods of households and risks depressing demand.
  •  The global jobs gap stood at 473 million in 2022, a rate of 12.3%, with a gender jobs gap to match the gender pay gap: The jobs gap for women is 15%, compared with 10.5% for men.
  •  Global employment is projected to expand by only 1% in 2023, down from 2.3% in 2022.
  •  Only 47% of people worldwide are covered by at least one social protection benefit.
  •  The unemployment rate for young people aged 15-24 is three times higher than that for adults.

The IMF is about to enforce worldwide austerity

What does Georgieva’s New Year’s message really mean?

Read about it in the article by Matteo Tiratelli

The world’s first trillionaire

When will it be? Who will it be?

When the world could see a trillionaire | The Week

A Warning for Today’s Super Rich From Ancient Rome’s Wealthiest Man

An interesting story from Ancient Rome: A Warning for Plutocrats From Ancient Rome’s Wealthiest Man | Time

Not an utopian ideal but an achievable necessity

(Part of the interesting New Year’s message of Vijay Prashad, Tricontinental, Institute for Social Research )

In May 2021, the executive director of UN Women, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, and the UN high representative for disarmament affairs, Izumi Nakamitsu, wrote an article urging governments to cut excessive military spending in favour of increasing spending on social and economic development. Their wise words were not heard at all. To cut money for war and to increase money for social development, they wrote, is ‘not a utopian ideal, but an achievable necessity’. That phrase – not a utopian ideal, but an achievable necessity  – is essential. It describes the project of socialism almost perfectly.

Our institute has been at work for over five years, driven precisely by this idea that it is possible to transform the world to meet the needs of humanity while living within nature’s limits. We have accompanied social and political movements, listened to their theories, observed their work, and built our own understanding of the world based on these attempts to change it. This process has been illuminating. It has taught us that it is not enough to try and build a theory from older theories, but that it is necessary to engage with the world, to acknowledge that those who are trying to change the world are able to develop the shards of an assessment of the world, and that our task – as researchers of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research – is to build those shards into a worldview. The worldview that we are developing does not merely understand the world as it is; it also takes hold of the dynamic that seeks to produce the world as it should be.

Continue reading
Older posts Newer posts