Strengthening the European Semester to Achieve Economies of Wellbeing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. What Is an Economy of Wellbeing and How Can It Be Shaped? An Overview
2.1. The Predominance of GDP and Its Consequences
2.2. Growing Support for Moving “Beyond GDP” and the Wellbeing Economy
2.3. Differences of Opinion on How to Achieve Economies That Deliver More Wellbeing
2.4. How to Design Economies of Wellbeing
In December 2013, the parties in a coalition government in Germany indicated that they wanted to align their policies more closely with the values and hopes of German citizens. They therefore conducted a national Wellbeing dialogue process that led to 203 national dialogue events across the country, from April to October 2015. People who were not able to take part in person could provide input through a website or by post. A total of 15,750 people took part in the dialogues. An independent team of scientists analysed the responses, which led to a government strategy on “Wellbeing in Germany-what matters to us”. These priorities were then organised into three broad categories with 12 dimensions: (1) ‘Our life’, which describes five dimensions: health, work, education, income and the time we have available. (2) ‘Our surroundings’, which covers three dimensions of lives: where we live, infrastructure and mobility in our cities and rural areas, security and social cohesion. (3) ‘Our country’, which forms the national and international framework and relates to the economy and environment, being able to live in freedom and equality and the concerns of citizens about peace and Germany’s responsibilities in the world [49]. |
The National Statistical Institute in Italy has developed a Measure of Equitable and Sustainable Wellbeing (BES) that includes 12 indicators like S80/20, greenhouse gas emissions and disposable income. These indicators have, since 2018, been used to forecast and discuss the budget law (‘Legge di Bilancio’). One of the criteria for selection was that they had to be forecastable over a short (three-year) horizon, and for this reason, subjective wellbeing was excluded. The Italian Ministry of Finance has indicated its intention to monitor the EU Recovery and Resilience Plan based not only on the basis of macroeconomic and employment indicators but also through the BES scoreboard [9]. |
Wales launched the “Wellbeing of Future Generations Act” in 2015 in the aim of improving decision-making towards the achievement of seven wellbeing goals (prosperous, more equal, globally responsible, resilient, healthier, cohesive communities, vibrant culture and thriving Welsh language). The Act, embedded in the Welsh constitution, requires all public bodies to consider the long-term impact of their actions, collaborate across sectors and involve communities. It has succeeded in changing the way Wales evaluates progress and success, which are now based on wellbeing rather than GDP. A Future Generations Commissioner helps to monitor the extent to which the wellbeing objectives are met. The 2020 Future Generations Report includes an overview of progress towards the seven wellbeing goals by public bodies [49]. |
Iceland has adopted a system-wide approach to wellbeing and introduced six wellbeing priorities (mental health, secure housing, better work/life balance, zero carbon emissions, innovation, growth and better communication with the public). These were co-developed with stakeholders and serve to guide Iceland’s Five Year Fiscal Strategic Plan. Progress is assessed through public health and wellbeing surveys, as well as a new wellbeing economy indicator system introduced in 2019. Iceland’s prioritisation of wellbeing, exemplified in taxation and labour market policies that invest in and protect the most vulnerable households, was instrumental in helping the country recover from the 2008 recession [50]. |
Finland’s national vision, The Finland we want, brings together existing sector-based long-term strategies within one overarching framework, with a common timeline for 2050 [51].The focus of the Finnish Action Plan for the Economy of Wellbeing (2023–2025) is to develop a common definition of social sustainability and indicators that reflect this. It will also develop impact assessment tools, which integrate this information. The aim is to ensure that the indicators and tools describing wellbeing are increasingly used in decision-making along with information describing economic and environmental sustainability, at national, regional and local decision-making levels [52] |
3. The ‘Broadening and Softening’ of the EU Semester Process
3.1. Wellbeing as the Overarching Aim of the European Union
3.2. The European Semester Process
3.3. The Emphasis on Fiscal and Macroeconomic Considerations
3.4. Socialising the Semester Process under the Juncker Commission
3.5. “An Economy That Works for People and the Planet” under the Von Der Leyen Commission
4. Reforming the European Semester to Shape Economies of Wellbeing
- Work in coalitions to establish how to best communicate the concept of Wellbeing Economies and the need to move from a “growth” to a “wellbeing” mindset and promote this message widely, within the public sector and beyond. Stimulate the interest and engagement of all relevant stakeholders in the Semester process by framing it as a potential “Wellbeing Economy” process.
- Work in coalitions, towards the development of a coherent, consistent overarching EU-level Wellbeing Strategy, to demonstrate to politicians and policy-makers the potential of such a Strategy. Identify Wellbeing priorities that are the most relevant to the EU level, drawing from, e.g., the EU’s Strategic Agenda priorities, the outcomes of the Future of Europe process and the results of other EU-wide surveys like the EU Social Survey. Establish potential targets and indicators that can be used to reflect these priorities, to develop a “wellbeing dashboard”. Such a dashboard and mechanism can make it easier to understand the progress being made across EU-level policy objectives, to steer EU-level funding, identify where policy initiatives can reinforce one another and what trade-offs need to be made. The ZOE Institute’s “Beyond GDP” dashboard is an inspiring example of what can be conducted [20].
- In the short term to medium term, pursue other initiatives that can lead to a more balanced consideration of different policy areas, within the European Semester process. The Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs (EPSCO) Council is becoming more involved in the Semester process, discussing the need for a Social Convergence Framework to better integrate the EPSR in the process [85]. These discussions build on calls by the Belgian and Spanish governments, for a Social Imbalance Procedure to match the Macroeconomic Imbalance Procedure [86]. Many organisations have called for a “golden rule”, to exclude green, health and social investments from EU national debt rules [62,87]. These initiatives can, over the longer term, be integrated into and contribute to the development of a wellbeing dashboard and a wellbeing alert mechanism. Many social, health and environmental bodies are also calling for an EU Parliamentary Group on Beyond GDP that can engage in and contribute to this process.
- Appoint a Commission Vice President for a Wellbeing Economy that is responsible for ensuring the coherence and consistency of policies at the EU level and their integration and coordination, to ensure initiatives reinforce one to achieve the EU’s strategic (wellbeing) priorities and objectives. The Vice President will also be responsible for identifying and making trade-offs more explicit and managing their resolution through democratic negotiation. The Commission Vice President for a Wellbeing Economy will ultimately be responsible for the design, implementation and evaluation of the overarching EU Wellbeing Economy framework and Strategy, which structures the European Semester process and ensures all dimensions are considered equally, for more efficient and effective governance processes, to achieve the European Union’s overarching aims of promoting peace, its values and wellbeing.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Policy integration refers to holistic thinking beyond specific policy areas within policy design processes. Policy coherence refers to holistic approaches and the extent to which various policies work well together and whether there are (missed) opportunities, possibilities or synergies between different policy areas. Policy consistency refers to whether there are inconsistencies or contradictions between individual elements of policies that impact the effectiveness of policies. Policy coordination refers to harmonising tasks, efforts and understanding between different government sectors and agencies, across governance levels. Trade-offs exist if conflicts between policy areas are deterministic and an improvement in one objective will lead to a deterioration in another objective. In that case, there must be a prioritisation of policy objectives. Tensions exist if the improvement in one objective can lead to deterioration but does so only depending on the contexts that may be modifiable. |
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Stegeman, I.; Putatti, V.; Godfrey, A.; Costongs, C. Strengthening the European Semester to Achieve Economies of Wellbeing. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024, 21, 634. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21050634
Stegeman I, Putatti V, Godfrey A, Costongs C. Strengthening the European Semester to Achieve Economies of Wellbeing. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2024; 21(5):634. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21050634
Chicago/Turabian StyleStegeman, Ingrid, Vania Putatti, Alba Godfrey, and Caroline Costongs. 2024. "Strengthening the European Semester to Achieve Economies of Wellbeing" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 21, no. 5: 634. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21050634
APA StyleStegeman, I., Putatti, V., Godfrey, A., & Costongs, C. (2024). Strengthening the European Semester to Achieve Economies of Wellbeing. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 21(5), 634. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21050634