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Published byLydia McDaniel Modified over 8 years ago
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Can ‘New Welfare’ address poverty through more and better jobs? Peter Taylor-Gooby*, Julia Gumy~, Adeline Otto* *University of Kent, Inspires FP7 ~ University of Bristol
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Background What can be done for poverty, given impact of post-industrialism, globalisation and financialisation in limiting feasible govt interventions, enhancing international competitive pressures, imposing new social risks and fragmenting social class forces? One answer: more + better jobs to meet economic (competitiveness, spending constraint), political (votes and legitimacy) and social (less poverty) goals – new welfare under many names
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LabelGoalMechanismSlogan ↑ Social investment (Third Way) Human capital/ productivity Education/ training Education, education, education Active WS Enabling welfare (New Risks) LM pn./↑wk conditions/ ↑ access FF working; individ. rights; tr. + support ‘More and better’ jobs /opportunities Pre- distribution Ec. rights not social rights Min./living wage; TU rights Back to the 1950s! ↓ Flexi-curity Social rights, not ec. rights Flexible LM/ supportive benefits Work with the market, not against it Work firstMobilisationCurb ec. + soc. rights Work not welfare
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New welfare focus Focus on micro-level: – Micro-economics of relative productivity; – Micro-politics of compromise/ exchange; – Micro-social of individual opportunity Not structural – Falling wage share plus rising LM inequality – Stagnant bottom-end incomes, even in good times – Changing balance of capital and labour – Relative opportunity of different social groups
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Employment has increased: total; women, 2001, 2007, 2011
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Total wages as % GVA 19702007% change US5749-7.4 Australia4639-7.6 Canada5548-6.8 France4342-0.5 UK5950-9.2 Germany5045-5.7 Japan4644-2.4 Finland4945-3.6 Denmark5660+4.3 Sweden4846-1.3
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Adjusted wage shares (ILO 2013)
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At risk of poverty before transfers Eurostat
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At risk of poverty after transfers Eurostat
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Contractual rights (EPI2, OECD)
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Some evidence 17 Euro countries in the good years 2001-7 New welfare: human capital (L.L.Learning); enabling (parental leave; ALMP); anti- discrimination (human rights; women’s ec. rights) LM structure: work rights (EPI); TU density DVs: Emp. rates and poverty (mkt. incomes) Limited data, exploratory pooled t-s analysis
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Employment: Prais-Winsten TS model 2001-7 βPCSE Constant56.56(3.29) *** Employment Parental leave (t-1) 5.22(2.37) * ALMP (t-1) -3.66(0.92) *** Human Capital Lifelong learning (t-1) 0.28(0.08) ** Non-Discrimination Human rights index (t-1) 0.32(0.23) Women's ec. rights index (t-1) -0.55(0.24) * Labour market institutions Contractual rights (t-1) 1.99(0.62) ** Union Membership (t-1) 0.08(0.03) **
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Poverty: Prais-Winsten TS model 2001-7 Constant32.20(3.32) *** Employment Parental leave (t-1) -0.33(2.11) ALMP (t-1) 2.74(0.32) *** Human Capital Lifelong learning (t-1) -0.09(0.04) * Non-Discrimination Human rights index (t-1) 0.30(0.12) * Women's ec. rights index (t-1) 0.26(0.37) Labour market institutions Contractual rights (t-1) -3.39(0.67) *** Union Membership (t-1) 0.01(0.02) Employment ratio (t-1) -0.05(0.02) **
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Main points Contractual rights, parental leave, LLL, union membership increase employment Women’s rights and ALMP reduce it Contractual rights, LLL, employment cut poverty; ALMP, hu. rights increase it Quality of work variables more powerful and significant for a ‘more/better jobs’ (higher emp./lower pov.) strategy
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Conclusions Practice – New welfare more effective in relation to employment than poverty – Relevance of institutional reform (contractual rights, employment protection) and individual level interventions Theory – Much discussion focuses on micro-level and distracts from macro-level – Not enough on shifting class forces, growing mkt. inequality and falling wage share
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Basic point New welfare analysis focuses on micro-level to exclusion of macro- level forces wh. currently sustain inequality and drive poverty The conversation in the well-lighted room, surrounded by darkness The bigger picture…..
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Class compromise
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