On Wednesday, 5 March, Finland’s Li Andersson (The Left), who chairs the Employment and Social Affairs Committee (EMPL) in the European Parliament, welcomed the ‘Union of Skills’ that the European Commission had proposed that same day (see EUROPE B13593A18) but lamented the lack of legislation on the social aspect [of the issue].
“For the EU to remain competitive, we need people with basic skills and need to retain the talents we have, which is why I consider the Union of...