Title: Studying social policy in time
1Studying social policy in time
2Social policy in time
- At the micro-level longitudinal analysis
- Social processes
- Transitions between employment and non employment
- Social exclusion
- Event history analysis
- Child birth
- Disability recipiency
- But at the macro-level?
3Three time-related processes
- Path dependency
- Example labour market policies
- Sequencing
- Example pension reform
- Relative timing
- Example Adaptation to new social risks
41. Path dependency
- In the early days of a policy, the room for
manoeuvre is relatively large. Early decisions
are relatively unconstrained - Early decisions, however, put policies on course
from which it is difficult to exit - Illustration through Polya Urn processes in
mathematics - Illustration through the QWERTY keyboard layout
in economic history
5Why path dependency ? Increasing returns (P.
Pierson)
- Increasing returns
- Policy change requires collective action.
- Institutional density or stickiness
- Increasing returns in political authority
- Complexity of politics and policies
6Example Labour market /industrial relations
policy in Britain and in Germany in the 1980s
(Steward Wood)
- PUZZLE
- UK Liberalisation, deregulation
- Germany status quo prevails in spite of attempts
by the Kohl government in the same direction - HYPOTHESES
- Employers preferences are different
7Employer preferences in the UK and in Germany
shaped by EPL
- UK
- low employment protection allows employers to
adjust quickly to demand fluctuations, and keep
short term profits high - Provides an incentive for workers to acquire
transferable skills. - Rigidities are detrimental to profitability
- Germany
- high employment protection generates a stable
labour market which discourages free riding - provides incentives for workers to invest in
their own skills - Collaboration with the unions is important for
providing training
8UK The Thatcher governments reduced the power of
the trade unions dramatically
9Germany failed attempts to undermine union power
because of employers
- attempt to restrict access to unemployment
benefits for workers indirectly affected by a
strike. - Attempt to undermine DGB monopoly in works
councils
10Conclusion
- Decisions taken decades earlier (interwar period
for Germany) have shaped current employer
preferences
112. Sequencing. Why do policy processes go through
sequences?
- Social learning (problem solving)
- Strategic learning by political actors
- Spill over effects (adjustment in the
Netherlands). - Staged processes with extension of the range of
available options
123. Relative timing of key developments
- Key socio-economic developments are not
synchronised across countries - Their relative timing may produce interactions
that can affect the patterns of
opportunity/constraints for policy change
13Old welfare states and new social risks
- Western welfare states were concieved and
developed during the postwar years - Socio-economic changes have resulted in the
emergence of new social risks - How are welfare states adapting to this?
14 it depends
- Nordic welfare states have been considerably more
successful in adapting - Continental European welfare states are lagging
behind - Timing of different developments explains
divergence
15Social change and new social risks
- Deindustrialsiation and the tertiarisation of
employment - Womens entry into labour markets
- Increased instability of family structures
- Destandardisation of employment
16Old and new social risk policies
- Old
- Pensions
- Survivors ben.
- Short term unemployment ben.
- Sickness benefit
- Invalidity ben. and serv.
- New
- Long term unempl. ben./ALMP
- In work benefits
- Child care serv.
- Family ben.
- Parental leave
- Services for older people
17It is justified to distinguish between two sorts
of social policies, because
- They constitute responses to different social
transformations, and have different objectives - The target groups of the two sets of policies are
different - Why not?
18Spending on old and new social risk polices as a
of GDP, averages 1997-2001
Source OECD SOCX 2004
19How do we explain divergence?
- Politics
- Institutional predisposition
- The relative timing of postindustrialisation,
ageing and welfare state maturation
20The timing of key postindustrial developments in
18 OECD countries
Source Based on OECD Statistical compendium
21Relationship between the average benchmark year
and spending on new social risk polices, 1997-2001
Source Based on OECD Statistical compendium
22Alternative explanations 1 the strength of the
left
Source OECD SOCX and Armingeon et al. CPDS
23Alternative explanation 2 the strength of the
Christian democrats
Source OECD SOCX and Armingeon et al. CPDS
24Alternative explanation 3 Catholicism
Source OECD SOCX and www.adherents.com
25Competing explanations correlation matrix
Source see previous slides
26Alternative explanation 4 catching upIncrease
in spending on new social risk polices in the
1990s and spending in 1987-1991
27Conclusions
- Timing matters, but together with politics
- If timing matters, we should develop new
techniques to introduce time base variables in
policy making models - Not good news for those who are hit by NSR in
Continental European countries