This study, commissioned by the European Parliament’s Policy Department for Citizens’ Rights and Constitutional Affairs at the request of the PETI Committee, analyses the impact of digitalization on vulnerable social groups in terms of lower income and education, age, people affected by disabilities, minority ethnic groups and people living in remote/isolated geographic areas. It includes a review of the relevant academic literature, secondary data analysis, as well as three case studies focused on digital inequality in e-commerce and digital financial services. The study reviews the EU legislations relevant in the policy areas that are the object of the case studies and elaborates some recommendations on the actions that the EU could undertake to tackle the digital divide affecting vulnerable social groups.
Simplification is not a synonym for deregulation. A simplification agenda requires a reassessment of regulations that are excessive, outdated, and ineffective in achieving their policy objectives. This should lead to [...]
EU digital regulation has created barriers to competitiveness in transport and beyond. It has created complexity, a high compliance burden and cost, fragmentation, legal uncertainty and unbalanced interpretations, damaging the [...]
The European Union Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) is the world's largest carbon market and a cornerstone of the EU's strategy to combat climate change. It is a primary tool [...]
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