ABSTRACT

The full impact of austerity policies across Europe is still being assessed, but it is clear that their gendered impacts have been consistently severe, structural and manifold. They have also been, until now, under-researched and under-estimated.

This book brings together the research of leading feminist economists in the area of gender and austerity economics to perform a rigorous gender-impact analysis both at national and pan-European levels. The chapters not only offer thorough evidence for the detrimental gender-impact of austerity policies across Europe, but they also provide readers with concrete suggestions of alternative policies that national governments and the European Union should adopt. With a combination of country case studies and cross-country empirical analysis, this book reveals the scope and channels through which women and men have been impacted by austerity policies in Europe, and goes on to offer readers the opportunity to assess the feasibility and implications of a feminist alternative to continued austerity.

This book will be invaluable to social science students and researchers, as well to as policy-makers searching not just for a Plan B to continued austerity policies but for a Plan F – a feminist economic strategy to stimulate sustainable economic recovery.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Austerity and after – the case for a gendered approach

part I|44 pages

Theorising on gender, austerity and policy alternatives

chapter 2|13 pages

A Feminist Alternative to Austerity

The purple economy as a gender-egalitarian strategy for employment generation

part II|78 pages

Case studies on the impact of austerity policies on women and men

part III|69 pages

Alternative policies, the role of social infrastructure and the care economy

chapter 10|21 pages

Costing a Feminist Plan for a Caring Economy

The case of free universal childcare in the UK

chapter |15 pages

Conclusion

Explaining austerity and its gender impact