A new kid in town? Active inclusion in European minimum income schemes
"This paper assesses the current variation in activation strategies directed towards able-bodied persons of working age who rely on a minimum income guarantee in 20 EU Member states. First, we argue that the Active Inclusion notion developed by the European Commission in its 2008 Recommendation...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Institution: | ETUI-European Trade Union Institute |
Format: | TEXT |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Antwerp
2014
ImPRovE |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19115741124919339239-a-new-kid-in-town?-active-incl.htm |
_version_ | 1771659900394405889 |
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author | ImPRovE, Antwerp Marchal, Sarah Van Mechelen, Natascha |
author_facet | ImPRovE, Antwerp Marchal, Sarah Van Mechelen, Natascha |
collection | Library items |
description | "This paper assesses the current variation in activation strategies directed towards able-bodied persons of working age who rely on a minimum income guarantee in 20 EU Member states. First, we argue that the Active Inclusion notion developed by the European Commission in its 2008 Recommendation on the active inclusion of persons on a large distance of the labour market provides a useful device to categorize current activation strategies towards minimum income protection (MIP) recipients. Next we use this active inclusion concept in a fuzzy set ideal type analysis of purpose-collected institutional data to investigate to what extent current activation strategies reflect the Commission’s concept of active inclusion. We find that there are few countries where the activation discourse has remained a dead letter. Most countries have implemented policy measures that aim to discourage benefit dependency among MIP recipients. Nevertheless, behind the realities of activation strategies towards minimum income recipients seldom lies the notion of active inclusion as defined by the European Commission. Particularly, many countries adopt predominantly negative incentives to increase labour market participation rates, rather than enabling measures. The majority of countries relies heavily on financial and non-financial incentives such as strong reasonable job definitions or severe sanctions for non-compliance with job availability requirements to encourage employment." |
format | TEXT |
geographic | EU countries |
id | 19115741124919339239_e0eb353180684619a2c3282e46dfc0a8 |
institution | ETUI-European Trade Union Institute |
is_hierarchy_id | 19115741124919339239_e0eb353180684619a2c3282e46dfc0a8 |
is_hierarchy_title | A new kid in town? Active inclusion in European minimum income schemes |
language | English |
physical | 28 p. Digital |
publishDate | 2014 |
publisher | Antwerp ImPRovE |
spellingShingle | ImPRovE, Antwerp Marchal, Sarah Van Mechelen, Natascha activation guaranteed income labour market A new kid in town? Active inclusion in European minimum income schemes |
thumbnail | https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=108717992699 |
title | A new kid in town? Active inclusion in European minimum income schemes |
topic | activation guaranteed income labour market |
url | https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19115741124919339239-a-new-kid-in-town?-active-incl.htm |