news

Italy's welfare revolution kicks off as 'citizens' income' goes live

Submitted by pmassetti on

Reuters (06.03.2019) - Italy’s flagship welfare reform kicked off in busy but orderly fashion on Wednesday as thousands of poor and unemployed people applied in post offices and tax assistance centers for the “citizens’ income” scheme.

Regions / Country
italy
Global challenges
Topics
Social assistance
Document Type

What happened to all the hype about Universal Basic Income?

Submitted by pmassetti on

World Economic Forum (27.03.2019) Three years ago, it was hard to avoid all the Universal Basic Income (UBI) trials. First Finland announced that it would launch a UBI experiment, then Switzerland voted on (but rejected) a UBI trial. Next Ontario, Canada announced it was getting in on the game, followed by proposed experiments in Utrecht, Barcelona, California, and Kenya.

Global challenges
Document Type

Austria passes welfare reform that spells cuts for foreigners

Submitted by pmassetti on

InfoMigrants (29.04.2019) Austria’s far-right government has pegged social benefits to German language skills and family size. While the government defended the reform, the cuts were met with criticism by opposition parties and UNHCR.

Regions / Country
austria
Global challenges
Topics
Social assistance
Document Type

ADB future programs for the Philippines to focus on social assistance, flood control

Submitted by dfabbri on

BusinessWorld (02.05.2019) THhe Asian Development Bank (ADB) said it operations in the Philippines between 2020 and 2022 will focus on social assistance, education and flood control among others. In a statement Tuesday, the bank said it is preparing its 2020-2022 Philippines Country Operations Business Plan, with initiatives including the Expanded Social Assistance project, the Facilitating Youth School-to-Work program and the Workplace Skills Funding pilot project.

Regions / Country
philippines, the
Global challenges
Topics
Social assistance
Conditional cash transfers
Document Type

[Opinión] El trabajo en Honduras

Submitted by dfabbri on

Diario El Heraldo (02.05.2019) El ingreso anual per cápita del hondureño es de $2,500. Por su PIB, Honduras es el tercer país más pobre de América Latina . Consecuentemente, las escalas salariales, exceptuando las percibidas por la alta jerarquía burocrática, están entre las más bajas de Centroamérica.

Regions / Country
honduras
Topics
Employment
Document Type

Finland’s Basic Income Experiment Shows Recipients Are Happier and More Secure

Submitted by pmassetti on

bloomberg.com (04.04.2019) Unemployed people derive significant psychological benefits from receiving a fixed amount of financial support from the state, according to a landmark experiment into basic income in Finland that highlights the disadvantages of the country’s existing means-tested system.

Regions / Country
finland
Document Type

Social security reform postponed until next European Parliament

Submitted by dfabbri on

EurActiv (19.04.2019) Deep divisions among MEPs made it clear on Thursday (19 April) that the social security coordination directive, aimed at enforcing the rights of mobile workers, would be postponed for the next European Parliament, after May’s EU elections.

Regions / Country
european union
Document Type

US: Health-care costs for retirees climb to $285,000

Submitted by dfabbri on

CNBC (02.04.2019) Despite the hefty price tag, there’s a piece of good news about retirees’ health-care costs: They aren’t rising as quickly as they were even a few years ago.

Regions / Country
United States
Global challenges
Topics
Financing
Document Type

Les Néerlandais menacés par une baisse de leur retraite | Les Echos

Submitted by gfilhon on

Un recul des prestations versées aux retraités menace dès l'année prochaine du fait de la mauvaise santé financière des fonds de pension. Le Premier ministre a convoqué d'urgence les partenaires sociaux pour remettre à plat le système. Les syndicats entendent négocier un abaissement de l'âge de la retraite à 66 ans.

Regions / Country
Europe
netherlands
Global challenges
Document Type

Nearly half of ALL jobs could be lost or radically transformed due to automation in next two decades

Submitted by pmassetti on

dailymail.co.uk (26.04.2019) A report from the OECD says automation will affect for half of all jobs. In 20 years, 14 percent will be fully automated, and 32 percent will be affected. To help transition it's time that governments develop a plan for workers. Training and even funding could be a part of the solution says the OECD 

Digital Economy Topical Cluster
Labour market
Large-scale automation
Societal Impact
Document Type