Under Wraps

The EU Observer reports on the labours of the Commission in producing a report on social models and sustainability, and the efforts they are making to try and de-politicise it. It seems our ageing societies and their implications will form the cornerstone of the report. This, at least, will mark a step forward. The October summit already bears all the hallmarks of being potentially much more interesting than the last one.

The request for the report predates the [Franco-British] argument. This is the general awareness in the commission”, one of the study’s contributors told EUobserver. “Nothing new was stimulated by this disagreement. Whether you are on one side or another, everybody wants a viable social system”.

The source added that while the US has already done a lot of research on the problems linked with an ageing population for example, the EU situation is made more difficult by the fact that “we have 25 different systems” to take into account.

The report will be put together by a wide pool of officials from various units covering financial affairs, enterprise, employment and internal markets, as well as commission president Jose Manuel Barroso’s inhouse team of economic experts, the Bureau of European Policy Advisors (BEPA).

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About Edward Hugh

Edward 'the bonobo is a Catalan economist of British extraction. After being born, brought-up and educated in the United Kingdom, Edward subsequently settled in Barcelona where he has now lived for over 15 years. As a consequence Edward considers himself to be "Catalan by adoption". He has also to some extent been "adopted by Catalonia", since throughout the current economic crisis he has been a constant voice on TV, radio and in the press arguing in favor of the need for some kind of internal devaluation if Spain wants to stay inside the Euro. By inclination he is a macro economist, but his obsession with trying to understand the economic impact of demographic changes has often taken him far from home, off and away from the more tranquil and placid pastures of the dismal science, into the bracken and thicket of demography, anthropology, biology, sociology and systems theory. All of which has lead him to ask himself whether Thomas Wolfe was not in fact right when he asserted that the fact of the matter is "you can never go home again".