Sunday, March 4, 2018

Bill Mitchell — Poverty among the unemployment now close to 50 per cent in the EU

Last week, Eurostat released it updated data covering people who are at risk of monetary poverty. In the press release/news page (February 26, 2018) – Almost half the unemployed at risk of monetary poverty in the EU – we learn that 48.7 per cent of unemployed persons in the EU “were at risk of poverty” in 2016, even “after social transfers” were taken into account. The situation has deteriorated significantly since 2005 as a result of the impacts of the GFC and the policy response taken by the European Commission and the Member States (under the EC’s thumb). While the usual suspects perform badly on these indicators (Spain, Greece, Italy), a stark result is that 70.8 per cent of German unemployed persons are at risk of poverty. This proportion has jumped from 40.9 per cent in 2005 (a 29.9 percentage point shift). So, even in the strongest Eurozone economy, the policy frameworks are delivering terrible outcomes. Increasing divergence and inequality and rising social exclusion are the most striking characteristics of the 13 years of European Union history since 2005. It doesn’t look like a policy bloc that any sensible nation should aspire to be part off (or remain within).
A vast swath of the developed world is slipping toward Third World status as a result of policy decisions.

Bill Mitchell – billy blog
Poverty among the unemployment now close to 50 per cent in the EU
Bill Mitchell | Professor in Economics and Director of the Centre of Full Employment and Equity (CofFEE), at University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia

5 comments:

Matt Franko said...

“the neoliberal smokescreen that has been erected to give cover for the capture of the government by the Right to advance their own interests.“

Right on cue the dreaded “neoliberal conspiracy!”...

“Smokescreen”: metaphor

“erected”: objectification

etc...

Matt Franko said...

“The existence of mass unemployment is the result of the government’s fiscal deficit (surplus) being too small (large) relative to the spending and saving decisions of the non-government sector.”

The dreaded “deficit too small!” .....

“The existence of mass unemployment is the result of: (insert ex post result here)”


Matt Franko said...

"why we're not making much money is because our profits are too low..."

Kaivey said...

Conspiracy or no conspiracy, but Poverty among the unemployment now close to 50 per cent in the EU.

Kaivey said...

Damn capitalism! Marx was right.