BETA


2010/2039(INI) Role of minimum income in combating poverty and promoting an inclusive society in Europe

Progress: Procedure completed

RoleCommitteeRapporteurShadows
Lead EMPL RONZULLI Licia (icon: PPE PPE), DAERDEN Frédéric (icon: S&D S&D), DELLI Karima (icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE), LAMBERT Jean (icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE), CYMAŃSKI Tadeusz (icon: EFD EFD)
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 54

Events

2011/03/28
   EC - Commission response to text adopted in plenary
Documents
2010/10/20
   EP - Results of vote in Parliament
2010/10/20
   EP - Decision by Parliament
Details

The European Parliament adopted by 437 votes to 162, with 33 abstentions, a resolution on the role of minimum income in combating poverty and promoting an inclusive society in Europe.

Parliament notes that, despite the economic prosperity and all the statements about the elimination of poverty, social inequalities have worsened and, at the end of 2008, 17% of the population (i.e. around 85 million people) was living below the poverty threshold in Europe, whereas in 2005, the proportion was 16%. The risk of poverty is higher for children and young people aged up to 17 years (20%) and the aged (19%) than for the rest of the population. Parliament highlights that one young person under 25 is unemployed (21.4%).

Firm up the labour market in order to combat poverty : Parliament stresses the need for concrete measures to eradicate poverty and social exclusion by exploring ways of reintegrating people into the labour market, ensuring a fair redistribution of income and wealth ( by guaranteeing an adequate income ), including guaranteeing throughout the European Union poverty-preventing and socially inclusive minimum income schemes based on the Member States' various practices, collective agreements or legislation, and working actively to promote adequate income and social protection systems. It demands that real progress be made on the adequacy of minimum income schemes, so as to be capable of lifting every child, adult and older person out of poverty and delivering on their right to have a decent living and stresses, in particular, the need to create decent, sustainable jobs for groups at a disadvantage. Parliament takes the view that welfare policy must therefore go hand-in-hand with an active labour market policy .

Set a threshold for minimum income : Parliament calls on Member States to establish a threshold for minimum income, based on relevant indicators, that will guarantee social-economic cohesion, reduce the risk of uneven levels of remuneration for the same activities and lower the risk of having poor populations throughout the EU. Stressing the multifaceted nature of poverty, Parliament considers that minimum income schemes should be embedded in a strategic approach towards social integration, involving both general policies and targeted measures - in terms of housing, health care, education and training, social services - helping people to recover from poverty and themselves to take action towards social inclusion and access to the labour market. Parliament points out that some member States do not have minimum income systems and calls on those that do not to provide them.

Revision of austerity policies: Parliament considers that social objectives must be an integral part of the crisis exit strategy and of the Europe 2020 strategy and that this means ensuring a cross-cutting social guideline as well as the redefinition of priorities and policies (such as monetary, labour, social and macro-economic policies, including the stability and growth pact, competition policies, internal market policies, and budgetary and fiscal policies). These policies have to guarantee a sustainable way out of the crisis and provide for effective policies to support those Member States whose need is greatest . Parliament insists on the need to revise the austerity policies being imposed in some Member States to fight the crisis, and stresses the importance of effective action for solidarity, including reinforcement, mobility, anticipation of transfers and reduction of cofinancing in respect of budgetary funding to create decent jobs, support productive sectors, fight poverty and social exclusion and avoid new forms of dependence and increased debt.

Introduce a minimum income to avoid poverty : Parliament underlines that introducing minimum income schemes - consisting of specific measures supporting people whose income is insufficient with a funding supply and facilitated access to services - is one of the most effective ways to combat poverty, guarantee an adequate standard of living and foster social integration. According to Parliament, adequate minimum income schemes must set minimum incomes at a level equivalent to at least 60% of average income in the Member State concerned . It reiterates that, however important, minimum income schemes need to be accompanied by a coordinated strategy at national and European level focusing on broad actions and specific measures such as active labour market policies for those groups furthest away from the labour market, education and training for the least skilled people, minimum salaries, social housing policies and the provision of affordable, accessible and high-quality public services.

Propose a study on the definition of a minimum European wage: to assist Member States to define a minimum income threshold, Parliament suggests that the Commission should study the impact which a legislative proposal it might submit concerning the introduction of an adequate minimum income at European level would have in each Member State. It suggests, in particular, that any such study should examine the difference between the adequate minimum income and the minimum wage in the Member State concerned and the implications for jobseekers of the introduction of an adequate minimum income.

Eradicate child poverty and focus on young people as a priority: Parliament calls for more committed action at European and national level for fighting poverty by means of policies that are more inclusive and coherent and better articulated, aimed at eradicating absolute poverty and child poverty by 2015 . Parliament draws attention to the needs of young people in particular those at risk of leaving school at an early age and the need for specific actions and policies concerning the access of young people to education through scholarships, student grants, student loans, etc. It calls on the Member States to ensure that combating youth unemployment is made a specific objective, with its own priorities.

Access to employment and social services : Parliament reaffirms the need to ensure better access, on a universal basis , which is free from physical and communication barriers, to the labour market, public health services, education at all levels, vocational education and training, public housing, energy provision and social protection. Jobs should be high-quality and barrier-free with rights and wages must be decent and pensions must include a basic old-age allowance which ensures that people who have worked all their lives enjoy a dignified retirement.

Adequate unemployment benefits: Parliament insists on the importance of introducing rules on the level of unemployment benefits which serve to keep recipients out of poverty. It considers that having sufficient resources and benefits to live a decent life is a fundamental human right.

Working poor: pointing to the increasing number of working poor and to the need to tackle this new challenge by combining different instruments, Parliament demands that a living wage must always be above the poverty threshold, and that workers who for multiple reasons remain below the poverty threshold should receive top-ups that are unconditional and easy to take up. Parliament believes that poverty affecting people in employment implies inequitable working conditions.

EU-2020 Strategy: more ambition needed to combat poverty: Parliament stresses that the target set out in the EU-2020 Strategy to reduce the number of people at risk of poverty by 20 million falls short of the initial ambitions of the Lisbon Strategy (to overcome poverty). It believes that this target should be achieved through concrete and appropriate measures, in particular through the introduction of minimum income schemes by all EU Member States. It calls on the Council and the Member States to base the Europe 2020 strategy headline target to tackle poverty on the relative poverty indicator (60% of the median income threshold), as endorsed by the Laeken European Council in December 2001.

Increase in homelessness: Member States should translate the EU headline target on poverty in to concrete and achievable national targets on priority issues of the EU social inclusion strategy, such as an end to street homelessness by 2015 .

Debt avoidance: Parliament considers it the duty of every Member State to take all appropriate measures to protect their citizens against extreme financial vulnerability by ensuring that they do not take on excessive levels of debt, in particular in the form of bank loans, for example by taxing the banks and financial institutions which agree to lend to persons who are not creditworthy.

European Action Plan: Parliament calls on the Commission to prepare an initiative to support further experiments in the Member States, taking into account best practices, and ensuring various individually guaranteed poverty-preventing adequate minimum and basic income models as a means of fighting to eradicate poverty. It calls on it to draw up an action plan, designed to accompany the implementation of a European initiative on minimum income . This initiative should take account of Recommendation 92/441/EEC, which recognises 'the fundamental right of the individual to sufficient resources in respect of human dignity'. With this in view, the Commission is called upon to consider establishing a common method for calculating a minimum survival income and a cost-of-living minimum (a 'shopping-basket' of goods and services), with a view to ensuring the availability of comparative measurements of poverty levels in the Member States.

Improve the take-up of social benefits : Parliament calls on Member States to take urgent action to improve take-up of benefits and monitor levels of non-take-up and its causes, recognising that cases of non-take-up account for between 20-40% of benefits according to the OECD. It stresses, in particular, the need for specific additional provisions for less-favoured groups (those with disabilities or chronic illnesses, single-parent families and families with large numbers of children) who incur additional costs because of their situation.

Women more exposed to poverty than men: Parliament recalls that the risk of falling into extreme poverty is greater for women than for men, given the shortcomings of the welfare systems and continuing discrimination, especially on the labour market. They consider that sustained and extensive efforts must be made to improve the situation of people at greatest risk of poverty and exclusion.

It should be noted that the plenary rejected several proposals for alternative resolutions including a joint proposal of the S&D, GUE/NGL and Greens/EFA groups calling for a European framework law on a minimum income.

Documents
2010/10/20
   EP - End of procedure in Parliament
2010/10/19
   EP - Debate in Parliament
2010/07/16
   EP - Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
Documents
2010/07/16
   EP - Committee report tabled for plenary
Documents
2010/06/24
   EP - Vote in committee
Details

The Committee on Employment and Social Affairs adopted the own-initiative report drafted by Ilda FIGUEIREDO (GUE/NGL, PT) on the role of minimum income in combating poverty and promoting an inclusive society in Europe.

It states that despite the economic prosperity and all the statements on eliminating poverty, social inequalities have worsened and, at the end of 2008, 17% of the population (i.e. around 85 million people) were living below the poverty threshold in Europe. Members highlight that youth unemployment has risen to unprecedented levels, reaching 21.4% in the European Union, ranging from 7.6% in the Netherlands to 44.5% in Spain and that one in five under-25s in the EU are unemployed. They stress the need for concrete measures to eradicate poverty and social exclusion by exploring ways of reintegrating people into the labour market, ensuring a fair redistribution of income and wealth (by guaranteeing an adequate income), including guaranteeing throughout the European Union poverty-preventing and socially inclusive minimum income schemes based on the Member States' various practices, collective agreements or legislation, and working actively to promote adequate income and social protection systems. The committee demands that real progress be made on the adequacy of minimum income schemes, so as to be capable of lifting every child, adult and older person out of poverty and delivering on their right to have a decent living.

Set a threshold for minimum income : Members highlight the need for action at Member States level with a view to establishing a threshold for minimum income, based on relevant indicators, that will guarantee social-economic cohesion, reduce the risk of uneven levels of remuneration for the same activities and lower the risk of having poor populations throughout the European Union, and call for stronger recommendations from the European Union regarding these types of actions. They consider that minimum income schemes should be embedded in a strategic approach towards social integration, involving both general policies and targeted measures - in terms of housing, health care, education and training, social services - helping people to recover from poverty and themselves to take action towards social inclusion and access to the labour market. The committee believes that the real objective of minimum income schemes is not simply to assist but mainly to accompany the beneficiaries in moving from situations of social exclusion to active life.

Introduce a minimum income to avoid poverty : the committee believes that introducing minimum income schemes in all EU Member States - consisting of specific measures supporting people whose income is insufficient with a funding supply and facilitated access to services - is one of the most effective ways to combat poverty, guarantee an adequate standard of living and foster social integration. According to Members, adequate minimum income schemes must set minimum incomes at a level equivalent to at least 60% of average income in the Member State concerned . They reiterate that, however important, minimum income schemes need to be accompanied by a coordinated strategy at national and European level focusing on broad actions and specific measures such as active labour market policies for those groups furthest away from the labour market, education and training for the least skilled people, minimum salaries, social housing policies and the provision of affordable, accessible and high-quality public services.

Propose a study on the definition of a minimum European wage : Members take the view that the Commission should study the impact which a legislative proposal it might submit concerning the introduction of an adequate minimum income at European level would have in each Member State. They suggest, in particular, that any such study should examine the difference between the adequate minimum income and the minimum wage in the Member State concerned and the implications for jobseekers of the introduction of an adequate minimum income.

Towards a cross-cutting social guideline at EU level : Members stress the multidimensional nature of poverty and social exclusion, and highlight the need to ensure the mainstreaming of social objectives and the importance of the social dimension and the social sustainability of macroeconomic policies. They point out that social objectives must be an integral part of the crisis exit strategy and of the Europe 2020 strategy and economic, social and territorial cohesion, and that this means ensuring a cross-cutting social guideline and effective social impact assessment which ensure the redefinition of priorities and policies such as monetary, labour, social and macro-economic policies, including the stability and growth pact, competition policies, internal market policies, and budgetary and fiscal policies. They call for the adoption of effective policies to support those Member States whose need is greatest, through the appropriate mechanisms. They stress the need for an evaluation of social inclusion policy, the application of the open method of coordination, fulfilment of the joint objectives and the national action plans in the context of the development of poverty, with a view to more committed action at European and national level and fighting poverty by means of policies that are more inclusive and coherent and better articulated, aimed at eradicating absolute poverty and child poverty by 2015 .

Access to employment and social services : Members call for the promotion of social integration and inclusion and consider it necessary to ensure better access, on a universal basis, which is free from physical and communication barriers, to the labour market, public health services, education at all levels, vocational education and training, public housing, energy provision and social protection. The committee takes the view that jobs should be high-quality and barrier-free with rights and that wages must be decent and that pensions must include a basic old-age allowance which ensures that people who have worked all their lives enjoy a dignified retirement. Members also point out that the school drop-out rate and restricted access to higher and university-level education are basic factors in the emergence of a high long-term unemployment rate and represent a blight on social cohesion. They state that a basis will have to be created for the introduction of specific actions and policies on young people's access to education through scholarships, student grants, student loans and initiatives to make school education more dynamic.

Adequate unemployment benefits : Members emphasise the importance of introducing rules on the level of unemployment benefits which serve to keep recipients out of poverty. They maintain that having sufficient resources and benefits to live a decent life is a fundamental human right to be enjoyed within the wider context of comprehensive, coherent measures to combat social exclusion and of an active strategy to promote social inclusion.

Working poor : pointing to the increasing number of working poor and to the need to tackle this new challenge by combining different instruments, Members demand that a living wage must always be above the poverty threshold, and that workers who for multiple reasons remain below the poverty threshold should receive top-ups that are unconditional and easy to take up.

EU-2020 Strategy : more ambition needed to combat poverty : Members state that the target set out in the EU-2020 Strategy to reduce the number of people at risk of poverty by 20 million falls short of the initial ambitions of the Lisbon Strategy (to overcome poverty). They believe that this target should be achieved through concrete and appropriate measures, in particular through the introduction of minimum income schemes by all EU Member States. They call on the Council and the Member States to base the Europe 2020 strategy headline target to tackle poverty on the relative poverty indicator (60% of the median income threshold), as endorsed by the Laeken European Council in December 2001.

Increase in homelessness : Member States should translate the EU headline target on poverty in to concrete and achievable national targets on priority issues of the EU social inclusion strategy, such as an end to street homelessness by 2015 .

Debt avoidance : Members consider it the duty of every Member State to take all appropriate measures to protect their citizens against extreme financial vulnerability by ensuring that they do not take on excessive levels of debt, in particular in the form of bank loans, for example by taxing the banks and financial institutions which agree to lend to persons who are not creditworthy.

European Action Plan : Members call on the Commission to draw-up an action plan, designed to accompany the implementation of a European initiative on minimum income in the Member States . This initiative on a guaranteed minimum income should take account of Recommendation 92/441/EEC, which recognises 'the fundamental right of the individual to sufficient resources in respect of human dignity'. With this in view, the report recommends that the Commission consider establishing a common method for calculating a minimum survival income and a cost-of-living minimum (a 'shopping-basket' of goods and services), with a view to ensuring the availability of comparative measurements of poverty levels and establishing means of social intervention.

Women more exposed to poverty than men : Members recall that the risk of falling into extreme poverty is greater for women than for men, given the shortcomings of the welfare systems and continuing discrimination, especially on the labour market. They consider that sustained and extensive efforts must be made to combat poverty and social exclusion, in order to improve the situation of people at greatest risk of poverty and exclusion, such as people in precarious employment, the unemployed, single-parent families, elderly people living alone, women, disadvantaged children, ethnic minorities and people who are ill or differently-abled.

2010/06/17
   EP - Amendments tabled in committee
Documents
2010/05/19
   EP - Amendments tabled in committee
Documents
2010/05/10
   CSL - Debate in Council
Details

In the context of the European year for combating poverty and social exclusion 2010, the Council adopted a resolution on the active inclusion of young people: combating unemployment and poverty, see 9018/10 . Given that the economic crisis has hit young people particularly hard, this issue was a high priority for the Spanish presidency . As well as inviting the Member States and the Commission to take action in a number of areas, the resolution stresses the importance of ensuring that youth policy is fully integrated into the implementation of the Europe 2020 strategy .

Documents
2010/05/10
   CSL - Council Meeting
2010/04/07
   EP - Committee draft report
Documents
2010/03/11
   EP - Committee referral announced in Parliament

Documents

Votes

Rapport Figueiredo A7-0233/2010 - Am 3 #

2010/10/20 Outcome: -: 344, +: 262, 0: 21
FR EL ES CY LU CZ PT AT MT DK ?? BE FI EE LV SE IE LT SK RO SI NL BG HU DE GB IT PL
Total
64
17
44
6
5
20
20
16
5
7
1
20
12
5
8
16
11
9
13
28
6
18
15
19
82
54
62
43
icon: S&D S&D
161

Luxembourg S&D

For (1)

1

Denmark S&D

2

Finland S&D

2

Estonia S&D

For (1)

1

Latvia S&D

1

Sweden S&D

3

Slovenia S&D

For (1)

1

Netherlands S&D

2
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
46

Spain Verts/ALE

2

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Denmark Verts/ALE

2

Belgium Verts/ALE

3

Finland Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Estonia Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Latvia Verts/ALE

1
3

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

United Kingdom Verts/ALE

5
icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL
29

Greece GUE/NGL

1

Spain GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Latvia GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

Sweden GUE/NGL

1

Ireland GUE/NGL

For (1)

1

United Kingdom GUE/NGL

1
icon: NI NI
23

Spain NI

1

Belgium NI

2

Romania NI

For (1)

1

Bulgaria NI

Against (1)

1
3
icon: EFD EFD
15

Greece EFD

Against (1)

Abstain (1)

2

Denmark EFD

2

Finland EFD

Against (1)

1

Slovakia EFD

Against (1)

1

United Kingdom EFD

Against (1)

1
icon: ECR ECR
46

Belgium ECR

Against (1)

1

Latvia ECR

Against (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

Against (1)

1

Hungary ECR

Against (1)

1
icon: ALDE ALDE
72

Spain ALDE

2

Luxembourg ALDE

For (1)

1

Denmark ALDE

Against (1)

1

Estonia ALDE

2

Latvia ALDE

Against (1)

1
4

Lithuania ALDE

Against (1)

1

Slovakia ALDE

Against (1)

1

Slovenia ALDE

Against (2)

2
icon: PPE PPE
234

Cyprus PPE

Against (1)

2

Luxembourg PPE

For (1)

Against (1)

2

Czechia PPE

2

Malta PPE

Against (2)

2

Belgium PPE

Against (1)

5

Finland PPE

Abstain (1)

4

Estonia PPE

Against (1)

1

Ireland PPE

3

Slovenia PPE

3

Netherlands PPE

Abstain (1)

3
AmendmentsDossier
202 2010/2039(INI)
2010/05/19 EMPL 187 amendments...
source: PE-441.188
2010/06/17 EMPL 15 amendments...
source: PE-443.064

History

(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

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  • body: CSL type: Council Meeting council: Education, Youth, Culture and Sport meeting_id: 3013 url: http://register.consilium.europa.eu/content/out?lang=EN&typ=SET&i=SMPL&ROWSPP=25&RESULTSET=1&NRROWS=500&DOC_LANCD=EN&ORDERBY=DOC_DATE+DESC&CONTENTS=3013*&MEET_DATE=10/05/2010 date: 2010-05-10T00:00:00
docs
  • date: 2010-04-07T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE439.981 title: PE439.981 type: Committee draft report body: EP
  • date: 2010-05-19T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE441.188 title: PE441.188 type: Amendments tabled in committee body: EP
  • date: 2010-06-17T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE443.064 title: PE443.064 type: Amendments tabled in committee body: EP
  • date: 2010-07-16T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2010-233&language=EN title: A7-0233/2010 type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading body: EP
  • date: 2011-03-28T00:00:00 docs: url: /oeil/spdoc.do?i=18736&j=0&l=en title: SP(2011)609 type: Commission response to text adopted in plenary
events
  • date: 2010-03-11T00:00:00 type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading body: EP
  • date: 2010-05-10T00:00:00 type: Debate in Council body: CSL docs: url: http://register.consilium.europa.eu/content/out?lang=EN&typ=SET&i=SMPL&ROWSPP=25&RESULTSET=1&NRROWS=500&DOC_LANCD=EN&ORDERBY=DOC_DATE+DESC&CONTENTS=3013*&MEET_DATE=10/05/2010 title: 3013 summary: In the context of the European year for combating poverty and social exclusion 2010, the Council adopted a resolution on the active inclusion of young people: combating unemployment and poverty, see 9018/10 . Given that the economic crisis has hit young people particularly hard, this issue was a high priority for the Spanish presidency . As well as inviting the Member States and the Commission to take action in a number of areas, the resolution stresses the importance of ensuring that youth policy is fully integrated into the implementation of the Europe 2020 strategy .
  • date: 2010-06-24T00:00:00 type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading body: EP summary: The Committee on Employment and Social Affairs adopted the own-initiative report drafted by Ilda FIGUEIREDO (GUE/NGL, PT) on the role of minimum income in combating poverty and promoting an inclusive society in Europe. It states that despite the economic prosperity and all the statements on eliminating poverty, social inequalities have worsened and, at the end of 2008, 17% of the population (i.e. around 85 million people) were living below the poverty threshold in Europe. Members highlight that youth unemployment has risen to unprecedented levels, reaching 21.4% in the European Union, ranging from 7.6% in the Netherlands to 44.5% in Spain and that one in five under-25s in the EU are unemployed. They stress the need for concrete measures to eradicate poverty and social exclusion by exploring ways of reintegrating people into the labour market, ensuring a fair redistribution of income and wealth (by guaranteeing an adequate income), including guaranteeing throughout the European Union poverty-preventing and socially inclusive minimum income schemes based on the Member States' various practices, collective agreements or legislation, and working actively to promote adequate income and social protection systems. The committee demands that real progress be made on the adequacy of minimum income schemes, so as to be capable of lifting every child, adult and older person out of poverty and delivering on their right to have a decent living. Set a threshold for minimum income : Members highlight the need for action at Member States level with a view to establishing a threshold for minimum income, based on relevant indicators, that will guarantee social-economic cohesion, reduce the risk of uneven levels of remuneration for the same activities and lower the risk of having poor populations throughout the European Union, and call for stronger recommendations from the European Union regarding these types of actions. They consider that minimum income schemes should be embedded in a strategic approach towards social integration, involving both general policies and targeted measures - in terms of housing, health care, education and training, social services - helping people to recover from poverty and themselves to take action towards social inclusion and access to the labour market. The committee believes that the real objective of minimum income schemes is not simply to assist but mainly to accompany the beneficiaries in moving from situations of social exclusion to active life. Introduce a minimum income to avoid poverty : the committee believes that introducing minimum income schemes in all EU Member States - consisting of specific measures supporting people whose income is insufficient with a funding supply and facilitated access to services - is one of the most effective ways to combat poverty, guarantee an adequate standard of living and foster social integration. According to Members, adequate minimum income schemes must set minimum incomes at a level equivalent to at least 60% of average income in the Member State concerned . They reiterate that, however important, minimum income schemes need to be accompanied by a coordinated strategy at national and European level focusing on broad actions and specific measures such as active labour market policies for those groups furthest away from the labour market, education and training for the least skilled people, minimum salaries, social housing policies and the provision of affordable, accessible and high-quality public services. Propose a study on the definition of a minimum European wage : Members take the view that the Commission should study the impact which a legislative proposal it might submit concerning the introduction of an adequate minimum income at European level would have in each Member State. They suggest, in particular, that any such study should examine the difference between the adequate minimum income and the minimum wage in the Member State concerned and the implications for jobseekers of the introduction of an adequate minimum income. Towards a cross-cutting social guideline at EU level : Members stress the multidimensional nature of poverty and social exclusion, and highlight the need to ensure the mainstreaming of social objectives and the importance of the social dimension and the social sustainability of macroeconomic policies. They point out that social objectives must be an integral part of the crisis exit strategy and of the Europe 2020 strategy and economic, social and territorial cohesion, and that this means ensuring a cross-cutting social guideline and effective social impact assessment which ensure the redefinition of priorities and policies such as monetary, labour, social and macro-economic policies, including the stability and growth pact, competition policies, internal market policies, and budgetary and fiscal policies. They call for the adoption of effective policies to support those Member States whose need is greatest, through the appropriate mechanisms. They stress the need for an evaluation of social inclusion policy, the application of the open method of coordination, fulfilment of the joint objectives and the national action plans in the context of the development of poverty, with a view to more committed action at European and national level and fighting poverty by means of policies that are more inclusive and coherent and better articulated, aimed at eradicating absolute poverty and child poverty by 2015 . Access to employment and social services : Members call for the promotion of social integration and inclusion and consider it necessary to ensure better access, on a universal basis, which is free from physical and communication barriers, to the labour market, public health services, education at all levels, vocational education and training, public housing, energy provision and social protection. The committee takes the view that jobs should be high-quality and barrier-free with rights and that wages must be decent and that pensions must include a basic old-age allowance which ensures that people who have worked all their lives enjoy a dignified retirement. Members also point out that the school drop-out rate and restricted access to higher and university-level education are basic factors in the emergence of a high long-term unemployment rate and represent a blight on social cohesion. They state that a basis will have to be created for the introduction of specific actions and policies on young people's access to education through scholarships, student grants, student loans and initiatives to make school education more dynamic. Adequate unemployment benefits : Members emphasise the importance of introducing rules on the level of unemployment benefits which serve to keep recipients out of poverty. They maintain that having sufficient resources and benefits to live a decent life is a fundamental human right to be enjoyed within the wider context of comprehensive, coherent measures to combat social exclusion and of an active strategy to promote social inclusion. Working poor : pointing to the increasing number of working poor and to the need to tackle this new challenge by combining different instruments, Members demand that a living wage must always be above the poverty threshold, and that workers who for multiple reasons remain below the poverty threshold should receive top-ups that are unconditional and easy to take up. EU-2020 Strategy : more ambition needed to combat poverty : Members state that the target set out in the EU-2020 Strategy to reduce the number of people at risk of poverty by 20 million falls short of the initial ambitions of the Lisbon Strategy (to overcome poverty). They believe that this target should be achieved through concrete and appropriate measures, in particular through the introduction of minimum income schemes by all EU Member States. They call on the Council and the Member States to base the Europe 2020 strategy headline target to tackle poverty on the relative poverty indicator (60% of the median income threshold), as endorsed by the Laeken European Council in December 2001. Increase in homelessness : Member States should translate the EU headline target on poverty in to concrete and achievable national targets on priority issues of the EU social inclusion strategy, such as an end to street homelessness by 2015 . Debt avoidance : Members consider it the duty of every Member State to take all appropriate measures to protect their citizens against extreme financial vulnerability by ensuring that they do not take on excessive levels of debt, in particular in the form of bank loans, for example by taxing the banks and financial institutions which agree to lend to persons who are not creditworthy. European Action Plan : Members call on the Commission to draw-up an action plan, designed to accompany the implementation of a European initiative on minimum income in the Member States . This initiative on a guaranteed minimum income should take account of Recommendation 92/441/EEC, which recognises 'the fundamental right of the individual to sufficient resources in respect of human dignity'. With this in view, the report recommends that the Commission consider establishing a common method for calculating a minimum survival income and a cost-of-living minimum (a 'shopping-basket' of goods and services), with a view to ensuring the availability of comparative measurements of poverty levels and establishing means of social intervention. Women more exposed to poverty than men : Members recall that the risk of falling into extreme poverty is greater for women than for men, given the shortcomings of the welfare systems and continuing discrimination, especially on the labour market. They consider that sustained and extensive efforts must be made to combat poverty and social exclusion, in order to improve the situation of people at greatest risk of poverty and exclusion, such as people in precarious employment, the unemployed, single-parent families, elderly people living alone, women, disadvantaged children, ethnic minorities and people who are ill or differently-abled.
  • date: 2010-07-16T00:00:00 type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2010-233&language=EN title: A7-0233/2010
  • date: 2010-10-19T00:00:00 type: Debate in Parliament body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20101019&type=CRE title: Debate in Parliament
  • date: 2010-10-20T00:00:00 type: Results of vote in Parliament body: EP docs: url: https://oeil.secure.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=18736&l=en title: Results of vote in Parliament
  • date: 2010-10-20T00:00:00 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2010-375 title: T7-0375/2010 summary: The European Parliament adopted by 437 votes to 162, with 33 abstentions, a resolution on the role of minimum income in combating poverty and promoting an inclusive society in Europe. Parliament notes that, despite the economic prosperity and all the statements about the elimination of poverty, social inequalities have worsened and, at the end of 2008, 17% of the population (i.e. around 85 million people) was living below the poverty threshold in Europe, whereas in 2005, the proportion was 16%. The risk of poverty is higher for children and young people aged up to 17 years (20%) and the aged (19%) than for the rest of the population. Parliament highlights that one young person under 25 is unemployed (21.4%). Firm up the labour market in order to combat poverty : Parliament stresses the need for concrete measures to eradicate poverty and social exclusion by exploring ways of reintegrating people into the labour market, ensuring a fair redistribution of income and wealth ( by guaranteeing an adequate income ), including guaranteeing throughout the European Union poverty-preventing and socially inclusive minimum income schemes based on the Member States' various practices, collective agreements or legislation, and working actively to promote adequate income and social protection systems. It demands that real progress be made on the adequacy of minimum income schemes, so as to be capable of lifting every child, adult and older person out of poverty and delivering on their right to have a decent living and stresses, in particular, the need to create decent, sustainable jobs for groups at a disadvantage. Parliament takes the view that welfare policy must therefore go hand-in-hand with an active labour market policy . Set a threshold for minimum income : Parliament calls on Member States to establish a threshold for minimum income, based on relevant indicators, that will guarantee social-economic cohesion, reduce the risk of uneven levels of remuneration for the same activities and lower the risk of having poor populations throughout the EU. Stressing the multifaceted nature of poverty, Parliament considers that minimum income schemes should be embedded in a strategic approach towards social integration, involving both general policies and targeted measures - in terms of housing, health care, education and training, social services - helping people to recover from poverty and themselves to take action towards social inclusion and access to the labour market. Parliament points out that some member States do not have minimum income systems and calls on those that do not to provide them. Revision of austerity policies: Parliament considers that social objectives must be an integral part of the crisis exit strategy and of the Europe 2020 strategy and that this means ensuring a cross-cutting social guideline as well as the redefinition of priorities and policies (such as monetary, labour, social and macro-economic policies, including the stability and growth pact, competition policies, internal market policies, and budgetary and fiscal policies). These policies have to guarantee a sustainable way out of the crisis and provide for effective policies to support those Member States whose need is greatest . Parliament insists on the need to revise the austerity policies being imposed in some Member States to fight the crisis, and stresses the importance of effective action for solidarity, including reinforcement, mobility, anticipation of transfers and reduction of cofinancing in respect of budgetary funding to create decent jobs, support productive sectors, fight poverty and social exclusion and avoid new forms of dependence and increased debt. Introduce a minimum income to avoid poverty : Parliament underlines that introducing minimum income schemes - consisting of specific measures supporting people whose income is insufficient with a funding supply and facilitated access to services - is one of the most effective ways to combat poverty, guarantee an adequate standard of living and foster social integration. According to Parliament, adequate minimum income schemes must set minimum incomes at a level equivalent to at least 60% of average income in the Member State concerned . It reiterates that, however important, minimum income schemes need to be accompanied by a coordinated strategy at national and European level focusing on broad actions and specific measures such as active labour market policies for those groups furthest away from the labour market, education and training for the least skilled people, minimum salaries, social housing policies and the provision of affordable, accessible and high-quality public services. Propose a study on the definition of a minimum European wage: to assist Member States to define a minimum income threshold, Parliament suggests that the Commission should study the impact which a legislative proposal it might submit concerning the introduction of an adequate minimum income at European level would have in each Member State. It suggests, in particular, that any such study should examine the difference between the adequate minimum income and the minimum wage in the Member State concerned and the implications for jobseekers of the introduction of an adequate minimum income. Eradicate child poverty and focus on young people as a priority: Parliament calls for more committed action at European and national level for fighting poverty by means of policies that are more inclusive and coherent and better articulated, aimed at eradicating absolute poverty and child poverty by 2015 . Parliament draws attention to the needs of young people in particular those at risk of leaving school at an early age and the need for specific actions and policies concerning the access of young people to education through scholarships, student grants, student loans, etc. It calls on the Member States to ensure that combating youth unemployment is made a specific objective, with its own priorities. Access to employment and social services : Parliament reaffirms the need to ensure better access, on a universal basis , which is free from physical and communication barriers, to the labour market, public health services, education at all levels, vocational education and training, public housing, energy provision and social protection. Jobs should be high-quality and barrier-free with rights and wages must be decent and pensions must include a basic old-age allowance which ensures that people who have worked all their lives enjoy a dignified retirement. Adequate unemployment benefits: Parliament insists on the importance of introducing rules on the level of unemployment benefits which serve to keep recipients out of poverty. It considers that having sufficient resources and benefits to live a decent life is a fundamental human right. Working poor: pointing to the increasing number of working poor and to the need to tackle this new challenge by combining different instruments, Parliament demands that a living wage must always be above the poverty threshold, and that workers who for multiple reasons remain below the poverty threshold should receive top-ups that are unconditional and easy to take up. Parliament believes that poverty affecting people in employment implies inequitable working conditions. EU-2020 Strategy: more ambition needed to combat poverty: Parliament stresses that the target set out in the EU-2020 Strategy to reduce the number of people at risk of poverty by 20 million falls short of the initial ambitions of the Lisbon Strategy (to overcome poverty). It believes that this target should be achieved through concrete and appropriate measures, in particular through the introduction of minimum income schemes by all EU Member States. It calls on the Council and the Member States to base the Europe 2020 strategy headline target to tackle poverty on the relative poverty indicator (60% of the median income threshold), as endorsed by the Laeken European Council in December 2001. Increase in homelessness: Member States should translate the EU headline target on poverty in to concrete and achievable national targets on priority issues of the EU social inclusion strategy, such as an end to street homelessness by 2015 . Debt avoidance: Parliament considers it the duty of every Member State to take all appropriate measures to protect their citizens against extreme financial vulnerability by ensuring that they do not take on excessive levels of debt, in particular in the form of bank loans, for example by taxing the banks and financial institutions which agree to lend to persons who are not creditworthy. European Action Plan: Parliament calls on the Commission to prepare an initiative to support further experiments in the Member States, taking into account best practices, and ensuring various individually guaranteed poverty-preventing adequate minimum and basic income models as a means of fighting to eradicate poverty. It calls on it to draw up an action plan, designed to accompany the implementation of a European initiative on minimum income . This initiative should take account of Recommendation 92/441/EEC, which recognises 'the fundamental right of the individual to sufficient resources in respect of human dignity'. With this in view, the Commission is called upon to consider establishing a common method for calculating a minimum survival income and a cost-of-living minimum (a 'shopping-basket' of goods and services), with a view to ensuring the availability of comparative measurements of poverty levels in the Member States. Improve the take-up of social benefits : Parliament calls on Member States to take urgent action to improve take-up of benefits and monitor levels of non-take-up and its causes, recognising that cases of non-take-up account for between 20-40% of benefits according to the OECD. It stresses, in particular, the need for specific additional provisions for less-favoured groups (those with disabilities or chronic illnesses, single-parent families and families with large numbers of children) who incur additional costs because of their situation. Women more exposed to poverty than men: Parliament recalls that the risk of falling into extreme poverty is greater for women than for men, given the shortcomings of the welfare systems and continuing discrimination, especially on the labour market. They consider that sustained and extensive efforts must be made to improve the situation of people at greatest risk of poverty and exclusion. It should be noted that the plenary rejected several proposals for alternative resolutions including a joint proposal of the S&D, GUE/NGL and Greens/EFA groups calling for a European framework law on a minimum income.
  • date: 2010-10-20T00:00:00 type: End of procedure in Parliament body: EP
links
other
  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/social/ title: Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion commissioner: ANDOR László
procedure/dossier_of_the_committee
Old
EMPL/7/02278
New
  • EMPL/7/02278
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure EP 52
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 052
procedure/subject
Old
  • 4.10.05 Social inclusion, poverty, minimum income
New
4.10.05
Social inclusion, poverty, minimum income
activities
  • date: 2010-03-11T00:00:00 body: EP type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading committees: body: EP shadows: group: PPE name: RONZULLI Licia group: S&D name: DAERDEN Frédéric group: Verts/ALE name: DELLI Karima group: Verts/ALE name: LAMBERT Jean group: EFD name: CYMAŃSKI Tadeusz responsible: True committee: EMPL date: 2009-10-22T00:00:00 committee_full: Employment and Social Affairs rapporteur: group: GUE/NGL name: FIGUEIREDO Ilda
  • body: CSL meeting_id: 3013 docs: url: http://register.consilium.europa.eu/content/out?lang=EN&typ=SET&i=SMPL&ROWSPP=25&RESULTSET=1&NRROWS=500&DOC_LANCD=EN&ORDERBY=DOC_DATE+DESC&CONTENTS=3013*&MEET_DATE=10/05/2010 type: Debate in Council title: 3013 council: Education, Youth, Culture and Sport date: 2010-05-10T00:00:00 type: Council Meeting
  • date: 2010-06-24T00:00:00 body: EP committees: body: EP shadows: group: PPE name: RONZULLI Licia group: S&D name: DAERDEN Frédéric group: Verts/ALE name: DELLI Karima group: Verts/ALE name: LAMBERT Jean group: EFD name: CYMAŃSKI Tadeusz responsible: True committee: EMPL date: 2009-10-22T00:00:00 committee_full: Employment and Social Affairs rapporteur: group: GUE/NGL name: FIGUEIREDO Ilda type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
  • date: 2010-07-16T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2010-233&language=EN type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading title: A7-0233/2010 body: EP type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • date: 2010-10-19T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20101019&type=CRE type: Debate in Parliament title: Debate in Parliament body: EP type: Debate in Parliament
  • date: 2010-10-20T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=18736&l=en type: Results of vote in Parliament title: Results of vote in Parliament url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2010-375 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading title: T7-0375/2010 body: EP type: Results of vote in Parliament
committees
  • body: EP shadows: group: PPE name: RONZULLI Licia group: S&D name: DAERDEN Frédéric group: Verts/ALE name: DELLI Karima group: Verts/ALE name: LAMBERT Jean group: EFD name: CYMAŃSKI Tadeusz responsible: True committee: EMPL date: 2009-10-22T00:00:00 committee_full: Employment and Social Affairs rapporteur: group: GUE/NGL name: FIGUEIREDO Ilda
links
other
  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/social/ title: Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion commissioner: ANDOR László
procedure
dossier_of_the_committee
EMPL/7/02278
reference
2010/2039(INI)
title
Role of minimum income in combating poverty and promoting an inclusive society in Europe
legal_basis
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 052
stage_reached
Procedure completed
subtype
Initiative
type
INI - Own-initiative procedure
subject
4.10.05 Social inclusion, poverty, minimum income