The EU aspires to be the most competitive, full employment economy in the world and has set a number of ambitious targets to be met by 2010 in order that it can achieve this goal. At the same time, it is pursuing an enlargement policy that will witness the accession of an increasing number of less developed nations. This paper explores some of the tensions that exist between these two goals as these are manifest in labour market indicators and finds the likelihood of meeting the deadline set for success remote
The paper is structured in two parts. The first one analyses the proposals of the European Commissio...
The Lisbon Strategy depicts how the EU plans to facilitate economic growth and to draw level with th...
[Introduction]. This paper will consider the competitiveness goal of the European Union as outlined ...
At the Lisbon summit of 2000 the European Union (EU) set an agenda for making Europe the most compet...
The Lisbon agenda of 2000 was an ambitious agenda for making the European economy the most competiti...
The Lisbon strategy could reinvigorate Europe’s economy and boost employment. In 2000 the European l...
The Lisbon strategy could reinvigorate Europe’s economy and boost employment. In 2000 the European l...
This article provides a critical analysis of the scope and the internal dynamics of the EU-27 Single...
More than half way into the decade, it is clear that the EU will fall short of reaching its ambitiou...
Europe’s economic governance is not only highly complex, but also increasingly inefficient and unsus...
In this paper, I discuss whether enlargement has been a successful external policy of the European U...
To be published at Krings, Bettina-J. ed. (2011), Brain Drain or Brain Gain? Changes of Work in Know...
The Lisbon Agenda places Europe in a uniquely difficult position globally, most particularly as an e...
[From the introduction]. The European Union at 50 years has become a complex and comprehensive entit...
Can European economics become “the most dynamic and competitive in the world”? Using readily accessi...
The paper is structured in two parts. The first one analyses the proposals of the European Commissio...
The Lisbon Strategy depicts how the EU plans to facilitate economic growth and to draw level with th...
[Introduction]. This paper will consider the competitiveness goal of the European Union as outlined ...
At the Lisbon summit of 2000 the European Union (EU) set an agenda for making Europe the most compet...
The Lisbon agenda of 2000 was an ambitious agenda for making the European economy the most competiti...
The Lisbon strategy could reinvigorate Europe’s economy and boost employment. In 2000 the European l...
The Lisbon strategy could reinvigorate Europe’s economy and boost employment. In 2000 the European l...
This article provides a critical analysis of the scope and the internal dynamics of the EU-27 Single...
More than half way into the decade, it is clear that the EU will fall short of reaching its ambitiou...
Europe’s economic governance is not only highly complex, but also increasingly inefficient and unsus...
In this paper, I discuss whether enlargement has been a successful external policy of the European U...
To be published at Krings, Bettina-J. ed. (2011), Brain Drain or Brain Gain? Changes of Work in Know...
The Lisbon Agenda places Europe in a uniquely difficult position globally, most particularly as an e...
[From the introduction]. The European Union at 50 years has become a complex and comprehensive entit...
Can European economics become “the most dynamic and competitive in the world”? Using readily accessi...
The paper is structured in two parts. The first one analyses the proposals of the European Commissio...
The Lisbon Strategy depicts how the EU plans to facilitate economic growth and to draw level with th...
[Introduction]. This paper will consider the competitiveness goal of the European Union as outlined ...