Lizoain, D., (2013), “The Jobs Recovery Is Always Two Years Away”, Social Europe Journal, 18 November.
Is the jobs recovery around the corner?
A few week ago, the European Commission published its latest economic forecast. Unemployment in the Euro area is projected to drop from 12.2% in 2014 to 11.8% in 2015. This is seemingly good news.
The bad news is that the Commission also predicted that unemployment would begin to drop in two years time in 2012 and 2011. In 2010 they predicted a slight drop for 2011 and then a more serious drop two years later.
The last time the European Commission projected that unemployment would be getting worse, not better, in two years time was in its Spring 2010 forecast, announced right after the Greek bailout on May 5th. Since then, the jobs recovery has always been two years away.
For the full article, press here.
Relevant Posts
- Thompson, S., (2013), “States of uncertainty: Youth unemployment in Europe”, Institute for Public Policy Research, November.
- Endeavor, (2013), Entrepreneurship and Investment Opportunities in Greece Today, Athens: Endeavor Greece.
- Blanchard, Ο., Jaumotte, F. and Loungani, P., (2013), “Unemployment, labour-market flexibility and IMF advice: Moving beyond mantras”, VoxEU, 18 October.
- Tyson, L., (2013), “The quality of jobs: The new normal and the old normal”, The New York Times, Economix Blog, 20 September.
- Rodrigues, M.J., (2013), “Youth unemployment, socio-economic divergences and fiscal capacity in the euro area”, Notre Europe – Jacques Delors Institute, Policy Paper No.101, November.