Author (Person) | Davies, Eric |
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Publisher | ProQuest Information and Learning |
Series Title | In Focus |
Series Details | 22.6.01 |
Publication Date | 25/06/2001 |
Content Type | News, Overview, Topic Guide | In Focus |
On 20 June, at their weekly meeting, European Commissioners adopted a Communication on 'job quality' and living standards in the European Union. Under the proposal, Member States are requested to create conditions for the promotion of jobs which are better-paid, better-skilled, safer, healthier, more accessible and which are supported by 'active' welfare systems. 'Job quality' will be assessed on the basis of two broad groups of indicators: job characteristics and work environment / labour market characteristics. Simultaneously, the Commission announced the first meeting of the High Level Task Force on Skills and Mobility, whose role is to identify barriers to the development of pan European labour markets and suggest how they can be overcome. In a further development - with implications for employment in an enlarged Union - the Commission welcomed the adoption by the Candidate Countries' of the eEurope+ Action Plan, intended to 'embrace the challenges of the knowledge-based economy through the use of Information Society technologies and tools.' Background The Communication adopted by the Commission, Employment and social policies: a framework for investing in quality, June 2001 [pdf] (COM (2001) 313) 'aims to take forward the Social Policy Agenda commitment to promote quality in employment and social policy.' It is a direct response to a request made by leaders at the March 2001 Stockholm European Council for the Commission to 'develop indicators on quality in work and [to] make quantitative indicators more accurate [...] in time for the Laeken European Council in 2001'. (It was also decided that job quality should be included as a general objective in the 2002 employment guidelines). The issue of quality in relation to employment and to social policy has been raised a number of times over recent years. In May 1996, the then Commissioner for Employment and Social Affairs, Padraig Flynn, said: 'Let us have good quality jobs and more of them'. Former Commission President Jacques Santer spoke, in January 1998, of needing 'far more fast growing services companies - high tech, information-society driven companies. That is the future. That is where many jobs can be created. Good quality jobs.' The Union's current employment policy is firmly based on decisions taken at the Lisbon European Council [pdf] in March 2000, at which leaders agreed that this decade should see Europe 'become the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world capable of sustainable economic growth with more and better jobs and greater social cohesion.' (In February 2000, just prior to the Lisbon Summit, the Commission presented a Communication on Strategies for jobs in the Information Society). The Feira European Council in June 2000 confirmed the importance of the Lisbon strategy and also approved the eEurope Action Plan, Objective 2 of which focused on 'Investing in people and skills' in the knowledge-based economy (the Action Plan followed the December 1999 launch of eEurope itself). Also in June 2000, the Commission adopted the Social Policy Agenda [pdf], which stated:
In September 2000 the European Commissioner responsible for Employment and Social Affairs, Anna Diamantopoulou, noted that the Agenda 'builds on three basic principles:
The Social Policy Agenda was endorsed in December 2000 by the Nice European Council, which confirmed that:
(The Nice European Council also confirmed the adoption of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, April 2001. Two Articles in the Charter are particularly relevant in this context: Article 31 on fair and just working conditions, and Article 34 on social security and social assistance). In a speech in February 2001 entitled Quality is the link between competitiveness and cohesion, Commissioner Diamantopoulou stated:
A framework for investing in quality Employment and social policies: a framework for investing in quality, June 2001 [pdf] restates the case for quality and offers a definition of 'quality in work', which it says:
The document also proposes a framework for assessing the quality of jobs, based on two Dimensions: 'Characteristics of the job itself' (Intrinsic job quality; Skills, life-long learning and career development), and 'The work and wider labour market context' (Gender equality; Health and safety at work; Flexibility and Security; Inclusion and access to the labour market; Work organisation and work-life balance; Social dialogue and worker involvement; Diversity and non-discrimination; Overall economic performance and productivity). The framework 'provides a general means of pursuing the central focus of the Social Policy Agenda on quality in all areas of employment and social policy.' The Commission also proposes undertaking a series of 'quality reviews' covering the areas of social policy addressed in the Social Policy Agenda. The proposed indicators will be discussed at the Laeken European Council in December 2001. The Belgian Presidency will 'pay special attention to the development of the European social model' and will put a special emphasis on quality of work. At the Stockholm European Council in March 2001, Belgium was given the task of 'refining and establishing the qualitative as well as the quantitative employment indicators'. The Presidency plans to initiate improvements in employment statistics and to include work quality as a criterion when assessing the National Action Programmes for employment. European social model The Communication also outlines the characteristics of the European Social Model, and compares and contrasts the situation in the EU and the United States. The distinguishing feature of the European model is stated to be not the level of expenditure, but the way in which resources are collected and spent. In the EU, funding for employment and social policy is mainly public; in the US it depends more on private contributions. Benefits seem to be more evenly distributed in Europe than in the US, 'where, for example, 40 per cent of the population does not have access to primary health care, even though spending per head is actually higher as a proportion of GDP than it is in Europe.' Both spend some 5% of GDP on education, but the US has a far higher illiteracy rate than Europe. It seems clear that the EU does not want to pursue economic growth and its associated employment opportunities at the expense of 'social cohesion'. The Presidency Conclusions of the Lisbon European Council [pdf] stated:
The Social Policy Agenda [pdf] itself states:
Speaking in September 2000 Commissioner Diamantopoulou emphasised that:
A few months later, in February 2001, the Commissioner stated:
Speaking at the launch of Employment and social policies: a framework for investing in quality, June 2001 [pdf], Commissioner Diamantopoulou said that quality
Further information within European Sources Online: European Sources Online: In Focus
Further information can be seen in these external links: European Commission: Employment and Social Affairs DG European Commission: Information Society DG SCADPlus
European Commission: Press and Communication Service Belgium: EU Presidency website Eric Davies On 20 June 2001 the European Commission adopted a Communication on 'job quality' and living standards in the European Union. |
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Subject Categories | Employment and Social Affairs |