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Avatar photoJayati Ghosh

Jayati Ghosh, professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, is a member of the Club of Rome’s Transformational Economics Commission and co-chair of the Independent Commission for the Reform of International Corporate Taxation.

Will Democracy Govern Capitalism — or Be Consumed by It?

Joseph Stiglitz and Jayati Ghosh

Taxing extreme wealth and multinationals is essential to defeating "21st-century Caesarism" and reclaiming democratic governance from the global elite.

Reaching Net Zero Might Fail—And It’s Not Because Renewables Are Too Expensive

Jayati Ghosh

Solar and wind are now cheaper than fossil fuels, but...

Saving the planet from plastics

Jayati Ghosh

If corporate interests undermine efforts to reduce plastic manufacturing, they will derail the fight against climate change.

What the Indian election result means for Europe

Jayati Ghosh

The jolt for Narendra Modi, Jayati Ghosh writes, should also make western leaders look in the mirror.

The ‘billions to trillions’ charade

Jayati Ghosh

Multilateral development banks believe private investment can meet developing economies’ climate and development needs.

The double life of the Indian economy

Jayati Ghosh

Narendra Modi aims to return to power, Jayati Ghosh writes, against a backdrop of unprecedented inequality.

Can the IMF and the World Bank really be changed?

Jayati Ghosh

Those with seats at the table of the international financial institutions, Jayati Ghosh writes, cling to their power.

Global tax evasion: the good and the bad news

Jayati Ghosh

A genuine assault on individual and corporate tax evasion, Jayati Ghosh writes, would tap vast revenue resources.

Taking inequality seriously—and tackling it seriously

Jayati Ghosh

Rising inequality is a challenge for the multilateral system, Jayati Ghosh writes, which must first measure it properly.

Why the Paris financing summit failed

Jayati Ghosh, Sandrine Dixson-Declève and Johannah Bernstein

The June summit promised to catalyse a revolution in climate finance but concluded without a single firm commitment.

The fertiliser conundrum

Jayati Ghosh

Making the global food system more sustainable and equitable is hugely complex and involves difficult trade-offs.

The discreet (but dubious) charm of tax treaties

Jayati Ghosh

Jayati Ghosh writes that, as with much else, bilateral tax treaties binding rich and poor countries are not equal partnerships.

How not to deal with a debt crisis

Jayati Ghosh

Jayati Ghosh warns against historically disastrous approaches to the sovereign-debt crisis hitting low- and middle-income countries.

The monetary tightening trap

Jayati Ghosh

The over-reliance on interest-rate increases will likely lead to economic disaster in low- and middle-income countries.

Grappling with power imbalances

Jayati Ghosh

In a world of interlocking crises, Jayati Ghosh finds an antidote to despair in the potential of mobilisation for a new eco-social contract.

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S&D Group in the European Parliament Advertisement

S&D Africa Days 2026

We are pleased to invite you to save the date for the S&D Africa Days 2026, taking place on 30 June and 1 July 2026, in Brussels. 

At a time when Africa is too often viewed through narrow and one-sided narratives, this initiative reflects a key political priority for the S&D Group: to advance a renewed, forward-looking partnership of equals between Europe and Africa based on equality, solidarity, social justice and shared progress. 

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A more strategic Europe? Risks and opportunities for the world of work

Europe’s ambition to achieve strategic autonomy is at risk of being undermined from within, according to the annual flagship report by the ETUI and the ETUC. Despite signs of macroeconomic resilience, weakening investment, stalled decarbonisation and growing labour market fragilities are eroding the very foundations on which Europe’s power depends. Once again, the Benchmarking Working Europe 2026 report stands out as an invaluable resource, providing a comprehensive set of indicators illustrated through more than 60 graphs and tables, with analysis from ETUI researchers.

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Is financial resilience and trust in Europe faltering?

In this episode of Eurofound Talks, host Mary McCaughey and senior researcher Eszter Sandor unpack the results of the 2025 Living and Working in the EU e-survey. While headline inflation has stabilised at 2.1%, the data reveals a continent gripped by chronic precariousness, with 57% of respondents now at risk of depression. Mary and Eszter explore how this economic insecurity is impacting institutional trust and democratic engagement.

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Read the book "The open future and its enemies" 

A robust democracy must not leave the future in the hands of the alliance between Big Tech and the far right. AI must be politically reined in and democratically shaped so that humanity retains its sovereignty.

Artificial intelligence is regarded as the driving force of progress. Yet it has long since become a challenge to democracy. The book argues that uncontrolled AI will erode our freedom, self-determination and democracy.

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WSI Minimum Wage Report 2026

Minimum wage policy across Europe has shifted significantly, with many EU countries raising wages above average and anchoring them to adequate living standards. This trend is consolidating as countries increasingly adopt the reference values recommended in the European Minimum Wage Directive — recently upheld by the European Court of Justice.

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