Dataset
25 October 2024
Dataset
25 October 2024
Opinion piece
30 August 2024
Opinion piece
12 August 2024
Westerners worried about growing disparities at home shouldn’t overlook the transformative effect of liberalisation in India and China
Essay
25 April 2024
This essay argues that global welfare gains should be safeguarded and built on, not undermined by a blinkered perception of liberalism.
Analysis
08 February 2024
Contrary to expectations, there was no widespread increase in either within-country or global income inequality during the pandemic
First glance
26 October 2023
Women can reach a higher potential in the workforce if men begin to play their part.
Podcast
11 October 2023
What is skills-based hiring and how can it improve labour or skill shortages?
Podcast
08 March 2023
In this podcast episode, we explore how the patriarchy intersects with economy, society and polity.
Dataset
14 February 2023
A dashboard that monitors the uptake and inequality of telework in the EU across countries, years, occupations and socio-demographic groups.
External publication
24 December 2022
In 2023 we might see positive economic surprises in Europe: better-than-expected growth and lower-than-expected inflation.
Event
28 November 2022
What factors contribute to inequalities on both sides of the Atlantic, and how should policymakers address them?
Blog post
28 November 2022
Low-income households suffer most from high inflation, but in some European Union countries the inflation burden is felt more equally than others.
Blog post
19 October 2022
Low-skill workers have seen faster wage growth than high-skill workers in many EU countries, contrary to the United States.
Podcast
05 October 2022
A conversation about inequality developments in the European Union and United States in light of the changing nature of jobs
Blog post
26 September 2022
Labour-market data on LGBTQIA+ people is limited, but there is some evidence that those in same-sex partnerships experience discrimination.
Working paper
30 August 2022
How do gender stereotypes and gendered work segregation, and digitalisation and automation, result in a vicious cycle of digital gender inequality?