dinsdag 30 november 2010
The Blur Between Spending and Taxes
Pourquoi les faiblesses du plan européen font plonger les Bourses
Le Voka refuse élections et Plan B
maandag 29 november 2010
Plus de personnes sur le marché du travail au premier semestre 2010
Managing credit booms and busts
190 pays à Cancun pour donner un nouvel élan aux négociations
Barroso: L'Europe a "tous les instruments" en cas d'autres crises
vrijdag 26 november 2010
How to live with climate change?
It won’t be stopped, but its effects can be made less bad. Read the complete article in The Economist here.
Groei is de enige reddingsboei
donderdag 25 november 2010
Globalisation 2.0 : une vision très attractive
Lisez cet article d'opinion dans Trends tendances ici.
Fiscalité des revenus mobiliers : l’Europe tance la Belgique
La réforme des provinces commence
Voici ce que propose Johan Vande Lanotte
dinsdag 23 november 2010
Strangling innovation and job creation with red tape
Think Again: Global Aging
A gray tsunami is sweeping the planet -- and not just in the places you expect. How did the world get so old, so fast? Read the complete article on Foreign Policy here.
La Wallonie doit se doter d’une fiscalité plus juste
Pensions ouvriers/employés : harmoniser coûtera 400 millions par an
maandag 22 november 2010
Altas des pensions 2010
The Japan syndrome: The biggest lesson the country may yet teach the world is about the growth-sapping effects of ageing
Les frais de santé jettent 100 millions de personnes par an dans la pauvreté
Renewable energy statistics
• Renewable energy accounted for 10.3% of gross final energy consumption in the EU-27.
• Electricity generation from renewable energy covered 16.6% of gross electricity consumption.
• The share of renewable energy in final energy consumption for heat was 11.9%.
Major public debt reductions: Lessons from the past, lessons for the future
L'OCDE incite la Belgique à mener un "assainissement vigoureux" de ses finances
L’UE et le FMI prêts à verser jusqu’à 90 milliards à l’Irlande
66.741 indépendants doivent travailler après l'âge de la retraite
vrijdag 19 november 2010
Asielaanvragen sneller behandeld
donderdag 18 november 2010
Oeso verlaagt groeiprognoses
Situation de la dette de l'Etat fédéral à fin octobre 2010
La pression fiscale belge parmi les plus hautes d'Europe
woensdag 17 november 2010
Cost-effective ways to address climate change
La Belgique, où les cerveaux se sentent bien
De l’Irlande au Portugal, la zone euro de nouveau ébranlée
Réforme des retraites en France : quelques leçons à tirer
dinsdag 16 november 2010
Enseigner, plus jamais?
Jobkorting op de helling
Echec des négociations sur le budget européen
Is economic growth a means, or an end?
Un décret mixité sociale, dites-vous ?
maandag 15 november 2010
Fiscal adjustments and the recession
Le gouvernement britannique remet à plat l'Etat-providence
Fraude sociale : la Confédération Construction collabore avec l’Etat
Le pauvre wallon plus pauvre
woensdag 10 november 2010
Lissabon 10 jaar later: de evolutie van de uitgaven voor onderzoek en ontwikkeling in België vergeleken met andere EU-landen
Lees dit rapport van het Federaal Planbureau hier.
La voiture électrique sauvera-t-elle le marché occidental ?
Blocage politique: la Belgique perd des investissements
Les grosses lacunes de l’immersion
dinsdag 9 november 2010
Plus d’emplois en Belgique… mais de moins bonne qualité
Les écoles riches aideront (un peu) les démunies
Lisez l'article dans Le Soir ici.
Le nombre de régularisations atteint un niveau record
Recommandations pour mieux aborder la diversité
Quels salaires pour 2011 et 2012 ?
maandag 8 november 2010
Cortebeeck wil kader voor gelijkschakeling arbeider-bediende
L´industrie de la construction. Ses grandes caractéristiques et sa contribution à l´économie wallonne
Competition’s Shortcomings in Curtailing Health Care Costs
Fiscal fragility: What the past may say about the future
The ageing, crisis-prone welfare state is bad news for welfare migration
35 % de demandes de naturalisation approuvées selon Milquet
vrijdag 5 november 2010
Asile : coup d’accélérateur CDH
donderdag 4 november 2010
Doing Business 2011
This year's list of the 10 most-improved economies also includes three in Sub-Saharan Africa—Rwanda (a consistent reformer of business regulation), Cape Verde, and Zambia—as well as Peru, Vietnam, Grenada, and Brunei Darussalam.
Globally, doing business remains easiest in the high-income economies of the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development and most difficult in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. But developing economies are increasingly active. In the past year, 66 percent reformed business regulation, up from 34 percent six years earlier.
Another reason for us to reform as well if we want to attract investments and spur our domestic entrepreneurial spirit. You can download the complete report here.
woensdag 3 november 2010
Wie is bang voor regionale personenbelasting?
Flexible working time arrangements and gender equality - A comparative review of 30 European countries
Read this EC report here.
Le Belge se fait du souci pour sa pension
dinsdag 2 november 2010
* Binnenland 'Integratie heeft niet gewenste effect gehad'
Efficiëntie en effectiviteit van de publieke sector in de weegschaal
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (and the Self-Destructive) of Innovation Policy: A Policymaker’s Guide to Crafting Effective Innovation Policy
France's pension reform: After the protests
As the dust settles, what have the French learned about themselves?
FRANCE has begun to clamber back to its feet after weeks of strikes, demonstrations, blockades, petrol shortages and sporadic violence. Despite delays, this week both houses of parliament voted to raise the legal minimum retirement age from 60 to 62 years; this should become law by mid-November. Oil refineries began to reopen and oil depots were forcibly unblocked on government orders. Rotting rubbish was cleared from the streets in Marseille. Although a further day of strikes was called for October 28th, unions are divided over whether to push their case further. And with schoolchildren on half-term holiday, university students seemed too half-hearted to keep the protests going.
As the French digest the turmoil of recent weeks, and businesses count the cost, what lessons might be drawn about the nature of protest and reform in France? One is that, even though union leaders are still able to draw huge numbers of protesters on to the streets, the disruptive power of strikes is not what it was. This is because the law now guarantees minimum service on public transport and in schools on strike days, and workers who down tools are no longer paid. The strikes have not prevented people getting to work altogether, nor paralysed the country. ...
Read the complete article in The Economist here.