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CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 408:
Knowledge-based Entreprenuership in Poland    

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 409:
Knowledge-based entreprenuership in Romania

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 407:
Knowledge-based entreprenuership in Estonia

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The Customs Union between Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia: and Overview of Economic Implicaitons for Belarus 

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 403:
Global Food Price Shock and the Poor in Egypt and Ukraine

CASE Network E-brief No. 10/2010:
After the Orange Era: Economic Prospects in Ukraine

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 402:
Does the Crisis Experience Call for a New Paradigm in Monetary Policy?

CASE Network Report No. 93:
Modeling Economic, Social and Environmental Implications of a Free Trade Agreement Between the European Union and the Russian Federation

CASE Network E-brief 9/2010:
Euro Crisis or Debt Crisis?  

Polish Economic Outlook:
PEO 1/2010   

CASE Network E-brief 8/2010:Is Inflation a Global Threat?

CASE Network E-brief 7/2010:
Prospects for Future Euro‐Mediterranean Trade

CASE Network E-brief 6/2010:
Oil Money vs. Economic Crisis: The Case of Azerbaijan 

CASE Network Report No. 92:
Challenges and Trajectories of Fiscal Policy and PFM Reform in CEE/CIS 

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 401:
Mergers and Acquisitions - The Standing of theory in the Quest for Better Institutions and Policy   

CASE Network Report 91:Pension Reform Options for Russia and Ukraine: A Critical Analysis of Available Options and Their Expected Outcomes

Polish Economic Outlook
4/2009 report

CASE Network E-Brief 05/2010Social security, Labour Market and Restructuring – Russia and Ukraine

CASE Network E-Brief 04/2009Challenges of Post-Crisis Economic Policy in Russia

CASE Network E-Brief 03/2010: The price of delay: the future of Russian and Ukrainian pension systems

CASE Network E-Brief 02/2010:
Tax wedge, labor market and the shadow economy

CASE Networks Studies and Analyses No. 400:
Energy Security in the EU and Beyond   

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 399:
Agriculture Income Assessment for the Purpose of Social Assistance: the Case of Ukraine    

CASE Network E-briefs No. 01/2010:
The global recession and energy markets

CASE Network Report No. 90:
Social Security, Labour Market and Restructuring: Current Situation and Expected Outcomes of Reforms

CASE Network E-briefs 12/2009:
From fiscal stimulus to fiscal crisis

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 398:
Social Security Driven Tax Wedge and Its Effects On Employment and Shadow Employment

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 397:
Restructuring and Social Safety Nets in Russia and Ukraine - Socail Security Influence on Labor Mobility: Possible Opportunities and Challenges

CASE Network Report No. 89:
Economic Integration in the Euro-Mediterranean Region

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 396:
Energy security, poverty and vulnerability in Central Asia and the wider European neighborhood

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 395:
The East European financial crisis

CASE Network E-briefs No.11/2009:
No, the central banks didn't do it

CASE Network Reports
No. 88

Deep Integrations with the EU and its Likely Impact on Selected ENP countries and Russia

PEO 3/2009
Large Fiscal Deficit in Poland - curse #1

CASE Network Studies and Analyses No. 394
Differentiation of Innovation Behavior of Manufacturing Firms in the New Member States. Cluster Analysis on Firm-Level Data




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Last update
2010-08-23


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Diversity and Commonality in European Social Policies: The Forging of a European Social Model (2009-03-19)

edited by Stanislawa Golinowska, Peter Hengstenberg and Maciej Zukowski deals with the complex issue of social policy in the European Union. Social policy being the privilege of individual member states, the book approaches the forming of a European Social Model on the basis of four grounds: 1) the values common to member states’ welfare systems; 2) the actual activities of the EU in the area of social policy; 3) the impact of European integration on the convergence of national social policies; and 4) the joint responses of member states to future challenges. Each article is constructed to look at the shape, character, possibility and difficulties in coming up with a European Social Model.

The common set of values is drawn from the similarities and differences present in the EU’s various types of welfare systems.  Forming the backbone of the Model’s values are those derived from the welfare systems of the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Denmark, Poland, Estonia and the Czech Republic, which are deemed representative of all existing models in the EU.  In this chapter, Stanislawa Golinowska also provides a comprehensive overview of the Polish welfare system, pointing out to the main steps in forming the Polish Social Policy and the influences European integration has had on it.

The following chapter outlines the EU’s Social Policy Program, the latter comprising soft rather than material activities related to the free movement of workers, the coordination of social security, working conditions, health and safety, and gender equality.  A main weakness is the lack of ability to enforce EU Social Policy as it is implemented via legislation (esp., non-binding agreements) and political activities.  This is because social policy still belongs to the realm of sovereign powers that member states retain.  A small fund to promote EU projects in this area and to carry out the EU’s Social Policy Program does exist.

The question of a European Social Model is strongly linked to that of whether European integration can achieve the convergence of the various welfare systems existing in the Union.  The challenge is more pressing as regards with integrating the new member states’ (post-communist countries) model(s).  Four types of factors stand out as influencing national social policies in the process of European integration: 1) old vs. new member states, 2) rich vs. poor countries, 3) more vs. less diverse countries, and 4) fast vs. low reformers.

The final chapter addresses the current and future challenges that member states face, concluding that working together is a more proactive approach given the supranational character of some social issues (e.g., protection of the environment and the climate change) and the added value a European perspective can bring to national policies (e.g., investment in high quality education).  Another important conclusion is that the European Union must enhance the endeavors of a common labor market by supporting the concept of flexicurity, mobility, and active labor market policy as well as providing a pension security.

Stanisława Golinowska, Professor of Economics, is a co-founder of CASE – Center for Social and Economic Research and Vice Chairwoman of the CASE Supervisory Council. She is also a Director at the Institute of Public Health, Jagiellonian University Medical College (Krakow, Poland).  She is the author of numerous articles and books on social aspects of economics and social policy reforms.

Review by Eva Jansky

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