Marchés du travail inclusifs

Le bon fonctionnement des marchés du travail est une condition préalable à la pleine utilisation du potentiel de création d’emplois de l’économie au sortir de la crise financière et économique. La crise a eu des conséquences très différentes sur le marché du travail dans les États membres de l’UE, et certains groupes, tels que les jeunes et les personnes peu instruites, ont été particulièrement touchés. Les changements structurels rapides en cours posent également de nouveaux défis en ce qui concerne d’éventuelles pénuries de main-d’œuvre et des inadéquations de compétences dans divers secteurs et régions.

Diverse group of business people sitting at table during briefing meeting in office

Dernières nouveautés

Trouvez le contenu le plus récent sur ce thème ci-dessous.

Rapport de recherche

28 August 2023

Societal implications of labour market instability
Eszter Sándorand 3 other authors

This report investigates the social groups whose attachment to the labour market may be unstable and who are most likely to have non-standard working arrangements, and the implications of such arrangements, and job insecurity, for workers’ well-being, social exclusion, trust, perception of fairness and political participation. The report finds that non-permanent contracts, informal work and insecure jobs are associated with negative outcomes when it comes to social exclusion and trust, while job insecurity is additionally associated with poorer well-being. Recent examples of policies addressing labour market instability are also presented, focusing on longer-term measures in the post-pandemic period.

Document de recherche Eurofound

14 June 2023

Barriers to employment of displaced Ukrainians
Klára Fótiand 2 other authors

In responding to Russia’s war against Ukraine, the EU activated its Temporary Protection Directive (TPD) for people who fled the country, allowing them to settle in the EU and to access basic public services and the labour market. By spring 2023, more than 4.5 million people had made use of the TPD or similar national protection schemes in the EU. In 2022, the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights conducted an online survey among people displaced from Ukraine. Eurofound has analysed the survey results on their experiences when seeking to access employment. This paper highlights the main barriers that displaced people encountered and suggests ways to facilitate their inclusion.

Note d’orientation

9 December 2020

Women and labour market equality: Has COVID-19 rolled back recent gains?
Martina Biselloand 2 other authors

Closing gender gaps in the labour market by achieving the equal participation of women is among the key objectives of the new Gender Equality Strategy 2020–2025. Despite significant progress in reducing the gender employment gap, it has stagnated over the past few years. Moreover, segregation in employment across sectors and occupations is still pervasive.

Against this background, this policy brief investigates the evolution of female labour market participation in the last decade and shows that the persisting gender employment gap cost Europe more than €320 billion per year in 2018, corresponding to 2.4% of EU GDP. The analysis also examines the disproportionate effects that the current COVID-19 crisis is having on working women, including the risk of disengagement from the labour market and the unintended consequences of confinement measures. It ends with a review of policy responses to the pandemic that have supported female employment in the short term and proposes how policy should respond in the long run to avoid rolling back decades of gains achieved in gender equality.

Faits saillants pour Marchés du travail inclusifs

Voici une sélection des publications les plus importantes pour ce thème.

9 December 2020

Note d’orientation

Women and labour market equality: Has COVID-19 rolled back recent gains?

Closing gender gaps in the labour market by achieving the equal participation of women is among the key objectives of the new Gender Equality Strategy 2020–2025. Despite significant progress in reducing the gender employment gap, it has stagnated over the past few years. Moreover, segregation in employment across sectors and occupations is still pervasive.

Against this background, this policy brief investigates the evolution of female labour market participation in the last decade and shows that the persisting gender employment gap cost Europe more than €320 billion per year in 2018, corresponding to 2.4% of EU GDP. The analysis also examines the disproportionate effects that the current COVID-19 crisis is having on working women, including the risk of disengagement from the labour market and the unintended consequences of confinement measures. It ends with a review of policy responses to the pandemic that have supported female employment in the short term and proposes how policy should respond in the long run to avoid rolling back decades of gains achieved in gender equality.

17 August 2020

Article de blog

How to use the surge in teleworking as a real chance to include people with disabilities

COVID-19 unleashed the pent-up potential for telework. Over a third of respondents to Eurofound’s online survey of Europeans in April had started teleworking because of the pandemic. Never before had so many people been working from home. For people with disabilities, telework has long been viewed as the ideal solution to removing many of the barriers to their participation in the open labour market. But it has not lived up to its promise and people with disabilities remain strongly disadvantaged when it comes to employment. Does the current embrace of telework by employers offer a second chance?

25 June 2020

Article de blog

Racial discrimination is not a thing of the past in the EU

Although EU law guarantees equal treatment for all among its founding principles, discrimination in the EU is not a thing of the past. Across Europe, 2% of workers report experiencing discrimination at work linked to each of the following: race, ethnic background, colour and nationality.

16 April 2020

Rapport phare

Labour market change: Trends and policy approaches towards flexibilisation

What have been the major trends and policy developments regarding the flexibilisation of employment in recent years? Eurofound’s work programme for 2017–2020 set out to document and capture these changes in the world of work. This flagship publication provides an overview of developments in Europe in the wake of the global financial crisis, as well as mapping the ongoing challenges and policy approaches taken at EU and national levels to find the right balance between flexibility and security in the labour market. Based, in part, on European Working Conditions Survey data, the findings of this report map labour market changes between 2008 and 2018 with a specific focus on working time, contract type and employment status.

27 November 2019

Note d’orientation

How your birthplace affects your workplace

Employment statistics consistently show that having a foreign background has an influence on people’s employment prospects. Less is known about the types of jobs workers with foreign backgrounds hold and their working conditions. This policy brief contributes to filling this gap. It compares the experience of workers with a foreign background to that of native workers; it also distinguishes between the experiences of first-generation and second-generation migrants and between those of women and men.
The evidence shows that having a foreign background can have a negative impact both on labour market integration and working conditions. However, significant differences emerge between different groups of migrants. The findings highlight the clear need for a nuanced approach to policymaking to ensure a level playing field in the labour market for workers with a foreign background.

25 September 2019

Rapport de recherche

Upward convergence in employment and socioeconomic factors

Upward convergence is a process whereby the performance of EU Member States in a given domain or range of domains is seen to improve while gaps between Member States reduce. Achieving upward convergence is of crucial importance to the EU, as the increase of disparities among Member States threatens the cohesion of the Union by counteracting citizens’ expectations that EU membership will improve working and living conditions. This report investigates recent socioeconomic and employment trends across Member States and offers possible policy measures to assist in avoiding future divergence. The analysis is based on a set of 21 indicators; most of them are headline indicators on the Social Scoreboard of the European Pillar of Social Rights. The findings reveal that, despite the negative effect of the 2008 economic crisis, upward convergence trends have been restored in most of the indicators examined.

Experts en Marchés du travail inclusifs

Les chercheurs d'Eurofound fournissent des informations spécialisées et peuvent être contactés pour des questions ou des demandes des médias.

Carlos Vacas‑Soriano

Senior research manager
Employment research

Carlos Vacas Soriano est directeur de recherche senior au sein de l’unité Emploi d’Eurofound. Il travaille sur des sujets liés aux inégalités de salaires et de revenus, aux salaires minimums, aux bas salaires, à la qualité des emplois, à l’emploi temporaire et à la segmentation, et à la qualité des emplois. Avant de rejoindre Eurofound en 2010, il a travaillé comme analyste macroéconomique pour la Commission européenne et comme chercheur sur les marchés du travail européens à la Banque centrale espagnole. Il est titulaire d’une maîtrise en études économiques européennes du Collège d’Europe à Bruges et d’un doctorat en économie du travail de l’Université de Salamanque (Doctor Europaeus).

Tout le contenu pour Marchés du travail inclusifs

Cette section donne accès à tout le contenu qui a été publié sur le thème.

Flag of the European UnionThis website is an official website of the European Union.
How do I know?
European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions
The tripartite EU agency providing knowledge to assist in the development of better social, employment and work-related policies