French Welfare State Reform
Idealism versus Swedish, New Zealand and Dutch Pragmatism
James Angresano
Select Format
Title Details
- ISBN: 9781843312673
- November 2007
- Pages: 304
- Imprint: Anthem Press
Over the past two decades, many welfare states have experienced a combination of low economic growth and rising unemployment, concurrent with increasing pension and health care obligations, which has exacerbated government budget deficits. Some analysts forecast that for a number of welfare states these problems will worsen in the future. Their fiscal problems, in particular, present welfare state policy makers with the dilemma of attempting to fund redistribution schemes consistent with the ideal of a secure egalitarian society while at the same time remaining competitive in a ‘new economy’ that places a premium on competition, innovation, and flexible labour and product markets.
Thus, an important issue has emerged: what types of reforms are required to enable welfare states to preserve sustainability? For the purpose of this study, a sustainable welfare state is one that can remain the guarantor against social risks and adverse economic trends for all segments of their respective societies and satisfy sound fiscal criteria (such as the Maastricht requirement for all members of the EMU that their fiscal budget deficit does not exceed 3% of the GDP), without imposing considerable financial burdens on future generations.
James Angresano is Professor of Political Economy at Albertson College, Idaho.
Acknowledgements; Preface: Whose Welfare?; 1. The Contemporary Welfare State: The Issue of Sustainability; 2. The Case of Sweden: From Deep Recession to Favourable Economic Performance; 3. The Case of New Zealand: Liberalizing the Welfare State, with Mixed Results; 4. The Case of the Netherlands: Gradual Reform with Social Cohesion Maintained; 5. The Case of France: Il y a une Éxception Française?; 6. Summary and Conclusions; References; Glossary; Index
‘Deeply rooted in a sound political economy analysis, this book is a must both for those who are still faithful to some sort of welfare state and for pro-market hardliners.’ —Wladimir Andreff, Professor at the University of Paris, Centre d’Economie de la Sorbonne (CNRS), Vice-President of the French Economic Association
Related products
-
Classroom 15
How the Hoover FBI Censored the Dreams of Innocent Oregon Fourth Graders
Edited by Peter Laufer
foreword by Ann CurryDecember, 2020
£38.00 / $38.00 -
Roland Barthes Writing the Political
History, Dialectics, Self
Andrew Stafford
November, 2022
£125.00 / $125.00 -
Rethinking Pakistan
A 21st Century Perspective
Edited by Bilal Zahoor, Raza Rumi
September, 2020
£125.00 / $125.00 -
Assassination in Colonial Cyprus in 1934 and the Origins of EOKA
Reading the Archives against the Grain
Andrekos Varnava
January, 2021
£24.99 / $24.99 -
The Life and World of Francis Rodd, Lord Rennell (1895-1978)
Geography, Money and War
Philip Boobbyer
January, 2021
£125.00 / $125.00 -
Financial Engineering of Climate Investment in Developing Countries
Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Action and How to Finance It
Søren E. Lütken
June, 2014
£115.00 / $115.00