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Stefano Sacchi

Bio: Stefano Sacchi is an academic researcher from University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Welfare state & Unemployment. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 50 publications receiving 762 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefano Sacchi include University of Pavia & Libera Università Internazionale degli Studi Sociali Guido Carli.

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TL;DR: The Open Method of Coordination (OMC) as mentioned in this paper was proposed by the Portuguese Presidency in 2000 to combat social exclusion in the context of employment and other policy sectors, and has been successfully applied in the European Union.
Abstract: Until the mid 1990s, the notion of Social Europe was primarily associated with the introduction of binding supranational rules aimed at safeguarding and possibly upgrading the social protection systems of the Member States. The political and institutional obstacles to such kind of rules were well known in practice and well understood in theory - especially in the wake of the negative vs. positive integration debate. But 'hard law' seemed to be the only effective strategy of action, given the low impact of weaker institutional tools such as recommendations, on the one hand, and the growing incentives for 'social dumping' generated by the completion of the internal market, on the other hand. The second half of the 1990s witnessed a gradual change of climate and perspective. Binding legislation continued to be seen as a very important ingredient of Europe's social dimension: indeed the debate on fundamental rights and on a possible fully-fledged EU constitution shifted the front of legal ambitions even further. But at the same time another strategy of policy intervention started to be considered and experimented with, resting on a complex mix of soft institutional ingredients, endowed with a strong potential of conditioning the direction of change at the national level. Originally applied in the area of employment, this new approach was then extended to other policy sectors - and most notably, policies to combat social exclusion - under the name of 'open method of coordination' (OMC), coined during the Portuguese Presidency in 2000. The main institutional ingredients of the OMC are common guidelines, national action plans, peer reviews, joint evaluation reports and recommendations. None of such instruments has a binding character, underpinned by legal enforcement powers. Moreover, while providing policy actors with a relatively clear agenda, the mix of these ingredients leaves ample room

154 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the relevance of implicit conditionality in the eurozone crisis is discussed, that is, conditionality based on an implicit understanding of the stakes and sanctions involved, underlain by some measure of power asymmetry.
Abstract: This article shows the relevance of implicit conditionality in the eurozone crisis, that is, conditionality based on an implicit understanding of the stakes and sanctions involved, underlain by some measure of power asymmetry. The concept of implicit conditionality is applied to the reconstruction of Italy’s sovereign debt crisis, and the structural – pension and labour market – reforms introduced by the Monti government, following requests from the European Union (EU). Actual or potential access to EU financial support – carried out through purchase of Italy’s bonds to alleviate market tensions on its debt – was the carrot. The threat of having to enter formalized, explicit conditional lending programmes with the International Monetary Fund in order to avoid default was the stick. Market discipline was the operating mechanism that made implicit conditionality effective, and the role of monitoring by the EU was pervasive. Developments described in this article seem to support a revitalization of the fusion hypothesis between EU and member states – at least in the eurozone.

123 citations

01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: The authors prega di confermare la propria partecipazione allo 011-6705060 o per email a flex-insecurity@carloalberto.org
Abstract: Si prega di confermare la propria partecipazione allo 011-6705060 o per email a flex-insecurity@carloalberto.org

102 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the issue of whether the economic crisis has spurred any convergence in the use of Short-Time Work in three social-insurance countries (Austria, Germany and Italy) or whether policy change has rather occurred in a path-dependent fashion.
Abstract: In all European countries, emergency policy measures have been introduced in order to counteract the employment consequences of the economic crisis. In the context of variously composed anti-crisis packages, many European countries have used Short-Time Work (STW) schemes, that is measures to subsidize a temporary reduction in working time intended to maintain an employment relationship. This article focuses on the issue of whether the economic crisis has spurred any convergence in the use of STW in three social-insurance countries – Austria, Germany and Italy – or whether policy change has rather occurred in a path-dependent fashion. In order to do so, the article also adopts a systemic approach, focusing on relationships of complementarity or functional substitution and equivalence among the various schemes comprising income maintenance systems to tackle the risks of partial or total unemployment.

62 citations

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TL;DR: After a decade of inertia, that left it unprepared to withstand the blow of the great recession, the Italian welfare state has witnessed significant changes since 2012 as discussed by the authors, and externally driven consolidat...
Abstract: After a decade of inertia, that left it unprepared to withstand the blow of the great recession, the Italian welfare state has witnessed significant changes since 2012. Externally driven consolidat...

53 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: A detailed review of the education sector in Australia as in the data provided by the 2006 edition of the OECD's annual publication, 'Education at a Glance' is presented in this paper.
Abstract: A detailed review of the education sector in Australia as in the data provided by the 2006 edition of the OECD's annual publication, 'Education at a Glance' is presented. While the data has shown that in almost all OECD countries educational attainment levels are on the rise, with countries showing impressive gains in university qualifications, it also reveals that a large of share of young people still do not complete secondary school, which remains a baseline for successful entry into the labour market.

2,141 citations

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459 citations

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384 citations

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TL;DR: In the absence of this analysis, we do not know if social capital is really driving political development or some other factor, such as economic development as mentioned in this paper, which includes social capital as one of its explanatory factors.
Abstract: opment, which includes social capital as one of its explanatory factors. In the absence of this analysis, we do not know if social capital is really driving political development or some other factor, such as economic development. Overall, this is a bold and ambitious book which examines participation across the world with a big theoretical canvas and a broad range of data. However, a more judicious analysis of the data and a greater recognition of the limitations of the sources would have made it a better book.

354 citations