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Featured researches published by Josefine Vanhille.


Journal of Social Policy | 2012

Combating In-Work Poverty in Continental Europe: An Investigation Using the Belgian Case

Ive Marx; Josefine Vanhille; Gerlinde Verbist

Recent studies find in-work poverty to be a pan-European phenomenon. Yet in-work poverty has come to the fore as a policy issue only recently in most continental European countries. Policies implemented in the United States and the United Kingdom, most notably in-work benefit schemes, are much discussed. This article argues that if it comes to preventing and alleviating poverty among workers, both the policy options and constraints facing Continental European policymakers are fundamentally different from those facing Anglo-Saxon policymakers. Consequently, policies that work in one setting cannot be simply emulated elsewhere. We present micro-simulation derived results for Belgium to illustrate some of these points. Policy options discussed and simulated include: higher minimum wages, reductions in employee social security contributions, tax relief for low-paid workers, and the implementation of a stylised version of the British Working Tax Credit. The latter measure has the strongest impact on in-work poverty but in settings where wages are compressed, as in Belgium, a severe trade-off between coverage and budgetary cost presents itself. The article concludes that looking beyond targeted measures to universal benefits and support for employment of carers may be important components of an overall policy package to tackle in-work poverty.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2018

Measuring water affordability in developed economies. The added value of a needs-based approach

Josefine Vanhille; Tim Goedemé; Tess Penne; Leen Van Thielen; Bérénice Storms

In developed countries, water affordability problems remain up on the agenda as the increasing financial costs of water services can impede the realisation of an equal access to water. More than ever, public authorities that define water tariffs face the challenge of reconciling environmental and cost recovery objectives with equity and financial accessibility for all. Indicators of water affordability can be helpful in this regard. Conventional affordability indicators often rely on the actual amount that households spend on water use. In contrast, we propose a needs-based indicator that measures the risk of being unable to afford the amount of water necessary to fulfill essential needs, i.e. needs that should be fulfilled for adequate participation in society. In this paper we set forth the methodological choices inherent to constructing a needs-based affordability indicator. Using a micro-dataset on households in Flanders (Belgium), we compare its results with the outcomes of a more common actual expenses-indicator. The paper illustrates how the constructed needs-based indicator can complement existing affordability indicators, and its capacity to reveal important risk groups.


Data in Brief | 2018

Water expenses by households living in Flanders : data availability in the Belgian EU-SILC

Tim Goedemé; Josefine Vanhille

Few data sources in developed countries contain for a representative sample of households information on water expenses alongside a rich set of reliable information on individual and household characteristics. In this Data in Brief we describe the Belgian EU-SILC data, which we used for ‘Measuring water affordability in developing economies. The added value of a needs-based approach’ (Vanhille et al., 2018) [1]. EU-SILC can be obtained from the Belgian National Statistical Institute and is the most important representative household survey on income and living conditions in the European Union, and contains, among others, an advanced measurement of household income. It is not well-known, though, that national datasets often contain more information, making them suitable for studies that are somewhat outside the ‘core scope’ of EU-SILC. One example is studying the consumption of water by households, as can be done for Belgium. In this article we briefly introduce the Belgian EU-SILC and present the data on water expenses for households living in Flanders. In 2015, 50 per cent less than 23 EUR on water, while 90 per cent spent less than 45 EUR on water.


Reconciling work and poverty reduction : how successful are European welfare states? / Cantillon, Bea [edit.]; e.a. | 2013

The Evolution of Poverty in the European Union: Concepts, Measurement and Data

Koen Decancq; Tim Goedemé; Karel Van den Bosch; Josefine Vanhille


Archive | 2013

The Evolution of Poverty in the European Union

Koen Decancq; Tim Goedemé; Karel Van den Bosch; Josefine Vanhille


Archive | 2010

Taxing care: enhancing the value of childcare time in the dual earner era

Joris Ghysels; Gerlinde Verbist; Josefine Vanhille


Archive | 2012

Een simulatie van huursubsidies voor huishoudens in Vlaanderen : een verdelingsanalyse.

Gerlinde Verbist; Josefine Vanhille


Archive | 2010

Taxing Care : enhancing the childcare time in the dual earner era

Joris Ghysels; Gerlinde Verbist; Josefine Vanhille


Armoede en sociale uitsluiting : jaarboek 2013 / Dierckx, D. [edit.]; e.a. | 2013

Tussen huursubsidie en woonbonus : een verdelingsanalyse voor Vlaanderen

Gerlinde Verbist; Josefine Vanhille


Archive | 2012

Home or Market Childcare? Swapping Child Care Arrangements Across Three European Countries

Josefine Vanhille; Joris Ghysels; Gerlinde Verbist

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Ive Marx

University of Antwerp

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