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Published byMarshall Boyd Modified over 9 years ago
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Regime = pattern of politics, policies, institutions Politics = way people compete for political power Policies = outcome of political conflict Institutions = rules of game; structure competition Regime types Social democratic (Denmark, Norway, Sweden) Conservative (Austria, Belgium, Germany, Netherlands) Christian democratic (Canada, Ireland, United States)
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Scandinavian countries Gradual, smooth democratization No linguistic, ethnic, religious cleavages Unique alliances Disunity among opponents, social homogeneity, strong working-class attachments, appeal to middle-class voters beyond working-class base
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Capitalist Big government High state expenditures and government revenues High percentage public sector employees Social democratic welfare state Universal Comprehensive Generous Quality of life detached from labor market Service intensive Redistributive
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Welfare state efficient and productive High labor force participation Dynamic and competitive Moderates workers’ wage demands Active labor market policies Highly competitive capitalist economies and large redistributive welfare states
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Centralized Parliamentary democracies Strong parties, disciplined majorities, fused executive- legislative Unitary Gives dissenting groups few opportunities to block legislation majority prefers Large, powerful labor movement High percentage of unionized workers Unions and party closely allied Corporatist interest groups Unions and employers engage in centralized bargaining
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Goods and services left to market; marginal state Weak left-wing parties Absent (e.g., U.S.) Class-voting low Class cleavages less intense; other sources of conflict Business dominates Interest group advantage Low voter turnout (lowest among working class; class divide subdued) Policies appeal to wealthy voters; ignore demands of working-class Business interests identified with interests of society as a whole (“What’s good for GM…”)
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Good creating new jobs, increasing economic growth Small public sector Regulation constrained Low welfare effort Low levels of public spending Circumstances of non-poor determined through private sector Policies suit wealthy Low costs of welfare limits taxes Purchase welfare (i.e., healthcare, daycare, retirement, etc.) privately through market
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Federal and Unitary Parliamentary and presidential Bicameral (differences in power of second chamber) Electoral systems (PR and plurality) Judicial review Centralization U.S.: strong federalism, bicameralism, independent Congress, weak parties, judicial review minorities (e.g., upper class) can capture part of state and thwart will of majority (e.g., middle and working class) Similar interest group structures (pluralist) and smaller, weaker union movements
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Class and church-state cleavages (emergent parties and other political issues) Centrist in orientation (“catch-all” parties) Workers, farmers, shopkeepers, business executives Move right or left in seeking coalition partners PR electoral systems
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Big government (but < social democratic regimes) High welfare expenditures (= social democratic regimes) Public sector employment (< average for conservative regimes) State -- large fiscal presence, small social presence Social policy reinforce traditional family values; mitigate effects of inequality Benefits preserve differentials among occupations and reinforce class differences
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Parliamentary democracies Bicameral (differences in power of houses) Differences in judicial review, unitary-federal forms Corporatist interest groups Limited number of hierarchically structured associations participate in policy-making process Degree of corporatism varies
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Physical well-being Christian democratic (CD) regimes marginally > Social democratic (SD) > Conservative (C); CD >= SD > C C -- highest rate of absolute poverty Informed decision-making: SD > CD > C Safety: SD > CD > C Civil and political rights/quality of democracy SD = CD = C press freedom, political rights, civil liberties, competitive elections “Voice and accountability” SD > CD > C Voter turnout SD > CD > C SD regimes best meets “good society” standards Quality of democracy, safety, informed decisions CD > SD (physical needs)
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