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Politics and Transformation: Welfare State Restructuring in Canada

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Title: Politics and Transformation: Welfare State Restructuring in Canada


1
Politics and TransformationWelfare State
Restructuring in Canada
  • WENDY MCKEEN AND ANN PORTER
  • Ryan Whittick

2
Welfare State and Social Reproduction
  • Welfare State A country with highly developed
    social services
  • What does a welfare state do?
  • A welfare state provides
  • Health
  • Education
  • Income for those who are unable to support
    themselves (elderly, ill, or people
    that cant find work)

3
  • Social Reproduction A Process where by peoples
    basic needs are met.
  • Needs
  • Ensuring people have a minimum to survive on
  • The requirement for long term development and
    education are met
  • People are cared for or have the means to look
    after themselves if they become sick

4
  • Who takes responsibility for societies
    needs? State, Market,
  • Institutions (Family, Church, Trade Unions,
    Benevolent Associations, Charities, Food Banks)
  • Contested Issues
  • Division of responsibility
  • The standard set for how income security is
    provided and care is given

5
What shapes these Issues?
  • Changing economic issues
  • Evolving family structures
  • Federal provincial institutional arrangements
  • Conflicting Ideas and political struggles

6
What shapes these Issues?
  • BECAUSE Early in the century responsibility for
    human welfare was left to Family, market,
    religious organizations, civil society, Not to
    the government

7
During and after WW 2
  • WFS expanded, and the state assumed greater
    responsibility for Social reproduction
  • Provision of
  • Health, Education, Welfare
  • Was assigned at confederation to the provinces,
    while the federal government was granted the
    major means of revenue.

8
Result How Does This System Work?
  • Negotiations and struggles between different
    levels of government
  • Provinces compete for funding from the
    government

9
Federal Government
  • Provides provinces with the appropriate amount of
    funding
  • Establishes programs involving the transfer of
    income directly to individuals
  • Including programs related to
  • Pension
  • Unemployment
  • Child or family benefits
  • Canadian millennium scholarship

10
Two Major Questions of This Chapter
  • What form has this transformation taken, and what
    are the implications for individuals and groups
    within society?
  • Which social forces and groups of actors have
    pushed for welfare state restructuring, and in
    what direction?
  • These Questions relate to the Nature, and extent
    of the transformation, as well as the politics

11
The Argument
  • The new welfare state is characterized by
    employability emphasizing re-entry into the
    work force, by the shift from universality to the
    targeting of benefits from adults to children
  • More generous system compared to what the
    neo-liberals described as tough love
  • The Aim Help WF dependants Kick the Habit

12
The result of the new system
  • More punitive (punishing) model
  • The Result
  • Increased
  • Poverty
  • Inequalities
  • Hardship among some groups

13
  • Downloading of responsibilities for meeting
    social needs to individuals and the homes
  • Social groups have become marginalized in WFS
    discussions

14
Comparative and theoretical approaches
  • New WFS-based not on universality, but by the
    selective targeting of benefits base on income.
  • -In An Effort To increasing work
    incentives, reducing expenditures,
  • and increasing benefits to the poor

15
Clayton and Potusson Argue
  • Significant WFS occurred, but changes have not
    been positive
  • Poverty, and inequality have increased,
  • security of employment and income has diminished
  • Growth per capita social spending has failed to
    keep up with per capita GDP
  • Some people are running schemes with the money
    they receive from social assistance

16
Sociological Imagination
  • Potussion What needs to be taken into Account
    when assessing politics of change?
  • Social Interest
  • Coalitions between different sectors
  • Long term mass unemployment

17
Feminist Analysis / Argument
  • WFS cannot simply be evaluated in terms of the
    relationship between states and markets. We must
    take into account
  • Unpaid work in the home, and its contribution to
    human welfare
  • Services that relieve house holds of caring work,
    and thus provide all members with access to paid
    work are of fundamental importance
  • Moreover, the relationships between
    States-Markets-Families is critical

18
Analysis from the perspective of
Families-Markets-and States
  • A range of other institutions have played a role
    in WFS restructuring
  • Churches, food banks, ect
  • The relationship between F-S-M was key welfare
    state nexus in the period after WW 2,

19
Critical Element Assessing the Welfare State
  • Not simply having the income to support an
    autonomous house hold, but the ability to
    create networks of support that can provide a
    sense of community and reduce isolation which is
    often a part of caring activities

20
Political Voice
  • The need for care or to give care affects ones
    ability to earn income and both receiving and
    giving care affects ones ability to participate
    politically
  • Equally Important a sense of effectiveness of
    the more marginal political coalitions and actors
    pushing for WFS change in other directions
  • Macro level trends and developments
  • Struggles at the policy community level

21
Political Voice
  • Much of the struggle over welfare state occurs as
    the debate over policy-whether it be poverty,
    health or education
  • Usually, debate only involves narrow groups of
    political actors, not the entire political
    community
  • Result plenty of voices and concerns are never
    heard, and therefore never considered

22
From Keynesian to a Neo Liberal Welfare State
  • The period from WW 2 until the mid nineteen
    seventys was one of welfare state expansion in
    Canada, and else where in advanced capitalist
    countries.
  • During WW 2, two key programs of the Canadian
    welfare state were introduced
  • Unemployment Insurance 1940
  • Family Allowance 1944

23
Major Expansions of the 1960s, and early 70s
  • Intro to Universal health insurance
  • Two new pension programs
  • The Canadian Pension Program
  • The Guaranteed Income Supplement, and the
    Canadian Assistance Plan
  • These two programs provided federal and
    provincial cost sharing for social assistance and
    social services.
  • provincial health and education expanded

24
Key Factors of the WFS of this Period
  • The state had come to assume greater
    responsibility than it had previously for social
    reproduction
  • The state realized
  • Economic systems could result in unemployment
    through no fault of ones own
  • Federal Government had to keep unemployment
    relatively low, and provide income security for
    those who fell through the cracks
  • Welfare state programs were considered important
  • Maintain social well being of the aggregate
    demand
  • Beneficial to the economy as a whole

25
Universality
  • Universality of benefits was granted as a right
    based on participation in the labor force, or as
    a right of citizenship, and was based on a family
    wage. Moreover, social welfare became more firmly
    centered on a core state-family-market nexus
    (connection)

26
Universality
  • Ultimately, this resulted in reinforced
    structural inequalities for large numbers of
    Minorities, and women (especially, those not in
    full time employment were excluded from the
    benefits of welfare state)

27
Mid 1970s Expansion Period Comes to an End
  • Number of factors faced reevaluation of the WFS
    model
  • Growing economic crisis
  • Fiscal pressure on the welfare state
  • Changing labor market
  • Family forms
  • Political struggles

28
1990s-The Most Substantial WFS Restructuring
took place
  • Budget was particularly significant in both
    reducing expenditure and restructuring federal
    involvement in social policy
  • The Canadian Assistance Plan and Established
    Programs Financing Act were replaced by The
    Canadian Health and Social Transfer
  • This provided transfers of funds to provinces
    with fewer conditions

29
2000
  • A new Neo Liberal Welfare State had been
    consolidated
  • The 80s and 90s were more concerned with
    inflation rather than unemployment

30
2000 Shift in Neo Liberal Philosophy
  • The shift in the new neo liberal philosophy was
    that high unemployment was the result not of
    market failures but of individual behavior,
    attitudes towards work, and the nature of welfare
    state programs themselves further influenced the
    shape of welfare state programs

31
2000 Shift in Neo Liberal Philosophy
  • Income security programs were seen as creating
    dependency and disincentives to work
  • Redesigned to be compatible with economic growth
    with an emphasis on Individual behavior

32
New Philosophy Towards Dependency
  • Incentives to enter and remain in the work force
  • Subsidize low wage employment
  • active programs encouraging re-entry into the
    labor market

33
Shift Away From Universality
  • Increased Targeting of benefits to the poor who
    are defined in terms of family income level
  • Social Assistance Core Model Key Areas
  • Child Benefits
  • Old age security

34
Shift In Eligibility
  • From Individual gt to Family
  • From Adult gt To Child
  • From Labor Force Status gt to Family income as a
    basis for receiving benefits
  • These shifts are in a wide range of programs of
    federal and provincial levels

35
Unemployment Insurance / Employment Insurance
  • UI-key Labor market based state program providing
    benefits to unemployed according to their past
    participation in the labor force
  • Amendments between 1975-78 Focus shift
  • From Market Failures gt to individual attitudes
    towards work

36
Goal of Amendments
  • Reduce disincentives to work
  • Encourage workers to stay employed
  • There by reducing their dependency on UI

37
Qualifications
  • Reforms Increased the penalty for those who left
    their employment early, and increased the number
    of weeks needed to qualify
  • Anyone who Quit, turned down a job, or was fired
    for misconduct was eliminated from receiving UI

38
1997 Amendments (most dramatic changes)
  • Major with drawls from the social safety net for
    the unemployed
  • Receiving UIgt 83 70s, 80s, down to 42 by
    1997
  • The Result a major source of federal revenue
  • The program name changed from UI to EI
  • Previously all paid occupants of the work force
    were insured against the risk of unemployment
    while only a minority are now.
  • These changes greatly encourage growth and
    maintenance of low wage, exploitive working
    conditions, because they left low wage contingent
    workers no options
  • Finally, these changes represented an erosion of
    universality

39
Federal Family / Child benefits
  • The family Allowance
  • Child Tax Exemption
  • Child Tax Credit program
  • Supplement for those with employment Income

40
National Child Benefits (NCB)
  • NCB-provides benefits to low and moderate income
    families through an income tested tax credit with
    eligibility and amount being based on family
    incomes reported on previous years tax credit
    form
  • Also referred to as NIT- Negative Income Tax

41
Changes In The Philosophy of the program
  • Disposable incomes of those families with
    children and those without should be equalized
    (Horizontal Equalization)
  • Family Allowance was universalized
  • Old program-set an amount and paid monthly
  • New program-oriented primarily to children at
    risk

42
Goal of FA
  • To alleviate the poverty of parents who have
    failed as individuals to support themselves and
    their children

43
Two Goals of the NCB
  • To address poverty
  • To reinforce work incentives
  • Underlying goal is to maximize private
    responsibility for the care of their children
  • NCB also serves a purpose to ensure parents they
    are better off working

44
NCB 1970s, 80s, and 90s
  • 70s it was important for checks to be written
    directly to women
  • By the early 90s the focus shifted to child
    poverty, and any concern for the financial
    concern of women was lost

45
The Consequences of Restructuring WFS
  • Erosion of
  • Social Solidarity
  • Social Equality
  • Downloading of Responsibility for social
    reproduction from state to family, market,
    institutions

46
Currently
  • Poverty rate as 96 went up from 13 to 17.6
  • The majority of unemployed have to rely on family
    or provincial social service
  • Employment Insurance is 55 of earnings

47
Women
  • In addition, The consequences of the increased
    reliance on the family for caring responsibility
    combined with the assumption that women should be
    in the full time labor force has made pressure
    high women especially minority women
  • Juggling jobs, day care and a fragile position
    within the labor market

48
Single Mothers
  • Disadvantaged when it comes to attaining material
    resources
  • Targets for being neglectful parents, caretakers,
    workers
  • Makes achieving autonomy and access to
    independent income more distant than ever

49
Negative Facts about WFS restructuring
  • Has had Negative consequences for the social
    citizenship status of adults and for their
    ability to exercise a political voice
  • Implications of growth of low wage contingent
    work and increased responsibility for unpaid care
    work are increasing gaps between those who have
    the time and energy and resources and those who
    do not
  • Children are becoming the new deserving citizens,
    and increasingly adults entitlement is based on
    the fact that they are attached to at least one
    child

50
Understanding The ChangesThe Politics of
Welfare State Change
  • After WW 2 the changes facing Canada as a
    developed nation became more dynamic
  • Women entered the work force
  • Internationalization
  • Economic crisis

51
The Construction of Neo Liberalismas a Hegemonic
Paradigm
  • Ideological Struggle that took place over 20
    years
  • Supported by business organizations, think tanks,
    such as the Frasier Institute, economic officials
    within the state
  • Shift of power away from labor, and a shift of
    power towards capital
  • Entitled strategies to take power away from
    organizations representing marginal social groups
    and progressive social movements

52
Strategies included
  • Eliminating Both
  • State funding for advocacy groups within social
    society (including womens groups)
  • Advisory bodies within federal state that
    represented marginalized groups to the government
  • A Range of other social groups that have been
    further marginalized by labeling them Special
    Interest

53
Neo Liberal Cut Backs
  • The focus on the individual rather than the state
    or collective responsibility was a first
    important step away from social solidarity
  • Who was affected?
  • Single mothers
  • Married women
  • Youth

54
Neo Liberal Cut Backs
  • Cost are disproportionately borne by women
    and the poor and the lack of social provision
    Creates new forms of social inequality
  • The possibilities for having policies that foster
    the reconciliation of paid work and domestic
    responsibility have become even more remote, as
    concerns of adults, and especially women are
    becoming side stepped in favor of focus on
    children
  • Policy making institutions have been restructured
    in a way that marginalizes opposition voices
  • Goals Have Shifted To
  • Meet international economic competitiveness
    rather than domestic well being

55
The Social Policy Community and the Response of
Left Liberal Actors
  • Responsible For
  • Targeting Child Poverty, and those deemed
    Needy, Elderly, Single Mothers, Women, Children
  • Provision on helping only those who have fallen
    through the cracks

56
The Social Policy Community and the Response of
Left Liberal Actors
  • Responsible for Legitimizing
  • Neo Liberal Model
  • Marginalizing the values of Universality
  • Horizontal Equity
  • Social Solidarity
  • Personal Autonomy for women

57
SummaryDimensions of a Welfare State in Canada
  • Significant reduction in state responsibility for
    social reproduction
  • Shifts
  • Major function to encourage people remain
    employed
  • Restructuring has resulted in
  • Targeting poor
  • Privilege of an upper tier of full employed
    workers
  • Shift benefits from adults to children
  • Has encourage the growth of low wage industries

58
Impact of Restructuring
  • Increase in Poverty
  • Inequality
  • Hardship
  • Especially for
  • Women
  • Poor Women
  • Minorities and their families
  • Increased pressures and poverty

59
In Design and Impact
  • Policy shifts work against the possibility of
  • Women gaining autonomy or independence from
    exploitative situations
  • Reduced space for individuals to exercise a
    political voice or public engagement
  • Targeting the marginalization of more radical
    voices and visions

60
Questions
  • Should the Federal Government be responsible for
    social reproduction?
  • Is it possible for people to lose the motivation
    to work if they have the ability to rely on
    social assistance?
  • Have people lost the motive to work as a result
    of social assistance?
  • What is so important about reducing isolation,
    and having a sense of community with respect to
    social services provided by the government?
  • Why are women and minorities the ones mostly
    affected by the neo liberal hegemic paradigm
  • Is engaging in more HARDSHIP a really bad thing
    for the nation when It forces people to strive?
  • Should people have a choice as to where their tax
    money goes, with respect to social reproduction?

61
Questions
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