Towards a more resilient Europe post-coronavirus: An initial mapping of structural risks facing the EU

The current coronavirus crisis highlights the need for the EU to enhance anticipatory governance and policy stress-testing. This paper maps potential structural risks for Europe in the next decade, analyzing 66 risks and discussing immediate risks and EU mitigation actions for 2019-24.

(Generated with the help of GPT-4)

Quick Facts
Report location: source
Language: English
Publisher: European Parliamentary Research Service, European Parliament
Authors: Adolfo Barberá Del Rosal., Alex Wilson, Angelos Delivorias, Anja Radjenovic, Annastiina Papunen, Astrid Worum, Beatrix Immenkamp, Branislav Stanicek, Carla Stamegna, Carmen-cristina Cîrlig, Christiaan Van Lierop, Costica Dumbrava, Eamonn Noonan, Elena Lazarou, Eric Pichon, Fabia Jones, Gregor Erbach, Ionel Zamfir, Izabela Bacian, James Mceldowney, Jana Titievskaia, Karoline Kowald, Krisztina Binder, Leopold Schmertzing, Mar Negreiro, Marcin Szczepański, Marie Lecerf, Marie-laure Augere-granier, Miroslava Karaboytcheva, Monika Kiss, Monika Nogaj, Naja Bentzen, Nicole Scholz, Nora Milotay, Rachele Rossi, Rafał Mańko, Ralf Drachenberg, Rosamund Shreeves, Stanislas De Finance, Suzana Anghel, Tania Latici, Vivienne Halleux, Wouter Van Ballegooij, Coordinated By Franck Debié
Page count: 100 pages

Methods

The research method involved analyzing medium- and long-term global trends, structured contingency planning, and stress-testing policies. This approach was used to map potential structural risks and outline immediate risks and EU actions for mitigation.

(Generated with the help of GPT-4)

Key Insights

In response to the coronavirus pandemic, the EU must focus on anticipatory governance, analyzing long-term trends and planning for contingencies. This paper presents an initial mapping of potential structural risks facing the EU over the coming decade. It identifies 66 risks and examines immediate concerns, proposing EU actions to address them within the current institutional cycle. The risks span various domains, including health, economy, social issues, politics, environment, digital technology, and external relations. The paper emphasizes the importance of EU efforts to prevent or mitigate these risks through structured policies and strategic actions.

(Generated with the help of GPT-4)

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Last modified: 2024/05/06 20:34 by elizabethherfel