Europe en marche?
Average unemployment rates continue to fall across Europe, employment is growing again in middle-paying jobs, offshoring is on the decline, the proportion of routine jobs is falling, and efforts to make work more sustainable have borne fruit.
Despite Brexit, the Trump effect and the pessimists, 2016 was a good year to live and work in Europe.
Or was it?
Clearly, on the face of it, there are some very good figures. Labour markets continued to strengthen over the year and some of the most badly affected countries such as Ireland, Portugal and Spain have experienced a clear upturn since 2013. Moreover, much of the recent employment growth has been in full-time, permanent jobs, across all pay categories. Youth unemployment has been falling gradually – by end-2016, the rate was 18.8 percent compared with 19.5 percent in 2015 – and the employment gap between men and women is (slowly) narrowing.
But, equally, worrying elements in the world of living and working in Europe have also emerged. While employment levels grow, so too does concern about the type of work on offer, the contracts made available and the overall quality of the jobs themselves.
Part-time employment, which increased rapidly during the crisis, continues to rise, responding in part to the working-time needs of the growing service economy. But, while part-time offers the crucial flexibility that some workers need to stay in the labour force, many other part-timers would prefer to have longer hours. Unsurprising perhaps, as results from Eurofound’s most recent European Working Conditions Survey (EWCS) highlight, that most people who work 20 hours or fewer a week have low incomes and are more likely to consider their jobs insecure and their career prospects poor.
In the same vein, the arrival of the digital age has seen the emergence of many new forms of employment which present their own challenges in terms of worker protection and security. Working conditions of virtual workers offering their services through online crowd employment platforms are usually inferior: low pay and no job security, paid leave or training.
More automation means fewer jobs in occupations involving high levels of routine tasks. Ironically, however, recent research indicates that while the proportion of routine jobs is shrinking, work is generally becoming more routine, even in occupations not traditionally identified as such, affecting, say, managers and professionals.
At the same time, the EWCS shows us that, while jobs themselves may be increasing, their quality varies greatly. Working conditions are seriously under threat in 20 percent of all European jobs: those classified as ‘poor quality’ where all seven qualitative dimensions are ranked negatively (social environment, physical environment, work intensity, prospects, working time quality, skills and discretion, and earnings).

The economic and social costs of these aspects are significant and are spread broadly across all countries and segments of European society – in the same way that the cost of inadequate housing (estimated at around €194 billion) and the cost of the gender employment gap (€370bn or 2.8 percent of GDP) or the inadequate integration of migrants or young people (particularly those not in education, employment or training – NEETs - estimated at a cost of about €142bn) into the labour market have a multifaceted and significant impact on the economic and social development of the European Union at this time.
The challenges are clearly there. They are real and they are serious.
But they are not insurmountable.
Evidence-based research, such as Eurofound’s, highlights the indisputable upward trajectory in several key economic indicators. It indicates growing levels of life satisfaction across Europe as well as continued satisfaction with working conditions. It highlights improvement in the lives of women and pinpoints better opportunities for old and young.
But even more importantly, it shows us the gaps. These are the worrying trends across Member States and the geographical areas and peer cohorts that require particular policy attention in the coming years.
This is how Europe will move forward. Not under a veil of fake news or post-truth campaign slogans but with hard facts and solid evidence towards building a better future for all those living and working in Europe.
Image source Shutterstock, Copyright focusimage
Related content
Annual report: Living and working in Europe 2016
Szerző
Mary McCaughey
Head of UnitMary McCaughey az Eurofound információs és kommunikációs vezetője. A dublini Trinity College-ban és a bruges-i College of Europe-ban végzett, majd Brüsszelben kezdett dolgozni az Europolitics-nál és a Wall Street Journal Europe-nál. Az ország demokráciába való átmenete során az Európai Parlamenti Képviselők Szövetsége Afrikával (AWEPA) dolgozott Dél-Afrikában, 1998-ban pedig az Európai Unió pretoriai küldöttségének szóvivőjeként dolgozott, és az EU–Dél-Afrika szabadkereskedelmi megállapodásról szóló tárgyalások során a sajtó- és tájékoztatási osztályt vezette. A koszovói háború befejezése után kommunikációs tanácsadóként dolgozott az Európai Újjáépítési Ügynökségnél Szerbiában. 2003-ban foglalta el az Eurofound főszerkesztői posztját.
Related content
30 May 2017
Living and working in Europe, Eurofound’s 2016 yearbook, provides a snapshot of developments and trends in the work and lives of Europeans as described in the research activities of Eurofound over 2016. Despite the strains on the European Union – slow economic recovery, rising euro-scepticism and the UK vote to leave the EU – Eurofound’s work reported much good news for its citizens in 2016. Full-time, permanent employment rose across all pay categories; the gender employment gap is narrowing and policy could narrow it further; working conditions have improved across many dimensions; more options around retirement are opening up for older workers; and many Member States have solid measures to ease the plight of asylum-seekers. While social developments, work and employment undeniably present challenges, Eurofound contributes to the EU’s capacity to address them through well-thought-out, evidenced-based policies. The yearbook is accompanied by the Consolidated annual activity report of the Authorising Officer for 2016, which is the Agency’s formal reporting on operations, staff and budgets - see Related content.
15 June 2017
This is the Consolidated annual activity report of the Authorising Officer for the year 2016. The report describes Eurofound's activities, particularly its research, information and communication programmes and policy achievements, in relation to the objectives set in the Work Programme 2016. A chapter is dedicated to the management and external evaluation control systems and assessment of their effectiveness. A presentation of Eurofound’s research findings and how they are embedded in the current policy context is also provided in Living and working in Europe 2016, Eurofound’s yearbook - see Related content.
