13 January 2013
It was all over Dutch television this weekend: more and more people are demanding a social agenda for Europe. Clearly a social agenda is needed, as is demonstrated by figures published this week by the European Commission which show that within the EU one in every four young people is unemployed, while one in four people is at best in danger of falling into poverty, or is already living in poverty. This can’t continue. But Eurocrats would not be Eurocrats if they didn’t immediately deduce from this that Brussels must have more power. One of the TV discussions centred on contracts between the member states and the European Commission regarding social reforms, in exchange for which countries would receive more money. If that’s Europe’s social agenda, we’d better be on our guard. A social agenda could also, however, consist of less austerity fetishism and more giving priority to social rights. That seems to me a much better way out of the crisis and out of the catastrophe that is hitting more and more ordinary people in Europe.
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