Upward convergence in the EU: Concepts, measurements and indicators
Published: 17 December 2018
In the wake of an economic crisis that had a very uneven impact on social outcomes across EU Member States, EU leaders and policymakers have come to acknowledge that to make social Europe a reality, social convergence must be given an equal footing to economic convergence in policymaking. In this context, and with rising concern over disparities in the social progress of Member States, Eurofound has established a research strand to provide the evidence on whether and where socioeconomic trends are converging or diverging across countries. This report establishes a conceptual framework to support Eurofound’s research on convergence. It develops a methodological strategy to examine convergence and applies it to investigate patterns across the EU in 37 indicators. These encompass four areas of the social domain: employment, working conditions, living conditions and socioeconomic factors. It finds that since the crisis, there has been upward convergence in 23 of the indicators.
The executive summary for this publication is available in PDF format.
Learn more about the authors of this publication.
ISBN
978-92-897-1798-4
Number of pages
74
Reference no.
ef18003
ISBN
978-92-897-1798-4
Catalogue number
TJ-03-18-486-EN-N
DOI
10.2806/68012
Permalink
http://eurofound.link/ef18003
Towards a conceptual framework to monitor convergence in the European Union – evidence from desk research and expert workshop
Monitoring upward convergence in the EU with R: The convergEU package
Tutorial: STATA toolkit for upward convergence analysis
Regional convergence and inequalities
ConvergEU – Description of Member States’ patterns
This section provides access to content that is related to the publication.
14 November 2017