Title: Policy
1Policy Practice SOW 1201
- Lecture 2
- Why do we have a welfare state and what exactly
is it supposed to do? -
-
2Overview of Lecture (1)
- Three Parts
- In order to answer the question - why do we have
a welfare state - we need to know a little about
the early development of welfare in Britain up to
the 1970s or so
3Overview of Lecture (2)
- We need also to locate this British development
in a comparative framework what is distinct and
similar about Britains welfare development? -
- This requires exploration of
- 2a The key factors involved in why
- welfare systems develop
- 2b Systems of classifying welfare systems
- 2c Understanding where Britain fits in these
- classifications
4Overview of Lecture (3)
- Finally in order to address the first question in
more detail we need to ask - 3a) what exactly do these different types of
state welfare provision do? Including some
attention to what is happening to welfare
provision in Britain now - Then we will, at the end of the lecture, be in a
better position to address the rather tougher
question - 3b) - what are they supposed to be doing?
51a Historical Stages in the Development of the
British Welfare State
- 1 Pre Poor Law
- Early forms of welfare Vagrancy Laws paupers
forcibly removed if they were from another parish
could not support themselves - 1601 Vagrancy Act made provision to set the poor
on work - Some out relief at end of 18th century
62 The Poor Law 1834
- Belief that population was increasing beyond the
means to feed to be fed - Malthus - The Poor Law Commission recommended that
- - the workhouse test no relief outside
workhouse - - less eligibility relief inside lower than
one could earn outside it - Poor Laws first attempt by govt. to impose order
in the giving of aid - Principle of less eligibility and the deliberate
stigma attached to claimants still very much
present today!
73 Gradual Involvement of State
- Enormous social problems in mid/late 19th century
by contemporary 1st world standards Outcast
London example origins of social work problem
of how to ration resources deserving poor , of
course, undeserving poor - British nation building gradual take over of
work by state of work previously done by church
charities e.g.1870 Education Act (free
compulsory education up to 11)Public Health and
Factory Act reforms gradual extension of local
government (beginnings of town planning,
council housing etc) WHY ??? return to below - National administrative systems established for
education and public health
84 Post War Reforms Universalist Welfare State
- Five Giants Attacked by the 1944 Beveridge
Report - Want Social Security Universal National
Insurance - Ignorance Education free till 15
- Disease National Health Service free at point
of delivery - Squalor Extension of council housing and New
Towns family allowances - Idleness combination of less eligibility rule
and free education -
- This Report was widely welcomed as a big
improvement of previous arrangements. It contains
3 principal elements - A guaranteed minimum standard including income
- Social protection in the event of insecurity
- Provision of services at best level possible?
social citizenship - Please note no initial plans for personal social
services assumed want would be abolished!
residiium would need assistance PSS for the
residuum/underclass?
9However.
-
- In practice post war British welfare may have
guaranteed welfare as a right and included
considerable protection BUT - - whilst coverage was extensive, benefits
- services were generally always delivered at a
low level - - social protection was patchy single women
disabled people - - services tightly rationed
- The Beveridge model was based on
- - Work being equated with paid male labour
- - Therefore a patriarchal conception of
families male breadwinner with dependents - - assumption of full male employment
- - Welfare services being geared up to this
traditional family model - - the promotion of national solidarity
ethnicity? - - managing life course risks through national
insurance spreading income out over life
time -
102 Comparative Framework 2a The Key Factors in
Why Welfare Systems Develop?
- Demographic economic as states get more
complex then welfare automatically develops
poor explanation - Politics demands from below trade unions
and concerns from above industrialists and
reformers implementing from above partial
explanation - Multi-dimensional
- Clearly the latter is the most useful
- How best to think about the different elements
that go towards why welfare state systems develop?
112b Systems of Classifying Welfare States
- Simple classification
- Institutional model UK universal minima
offered to all - Institutional- Redistributive or Social
Democratic model Sweden comprehensive
provision with a commitment to egalitarianism - Liberal or residual model USA individuals
largely expected to provide for themselves
welfare for the residuals..often attached to a
punitive view of the poor
12An improved way of thinking about this issue
- Esping-Andersen (1990, 1999) brought previous
ways of thinking about this issue together
tried to theorise welfare states as combinations
of political/economic and social factors and
called them regime types - He analysed
- the level of state spending
- de-commodification the extent to which welfare
was provided by non-market providers - stratification the extent to which access to
welfare was determined by ones social class
13In practice this meanswe can classify welfare
regimes
Sweden Germany USA
Regime Type Social Democratic Corporatist Liberal
Political Base Broad-based compromise Employer/ Worker coalition Free Market
Service Type Universal Occupational Residual
Public Expenditure High level High Level Low level
Labour Market High Employment High Wage High Wage Low Wage
142c Where Does Britain Fit in?
- Britain led the way in trying to provide a
comprehensive universal welfare system post
1945 welfare reforms did represent an important
leap forward.but not very extensive..not very
social democratic! - For, at root, our benefits are at best modest
often dependent on means testing, with limited
transfers between rich poor, encouragement of
private welfare..but not liberal either. More
about life time recycling of resources
15Britain an odd mixa peculiar welfare state
-
- There is still a strong foundation of universal
principles in the education and health sectors
and some continuing commitment to universal
social benefits at a low level. - But we tolerate and encourage private
provision.and much welfare change of the last
few years has not done an enormous amount to
redistribute income from rich to poor - Britain combines elements of the liberal or
residual welfare system with strong remnants of a
social democratic regime education and health
16Overview of British States welfare provision
- As we saw last week the British state principally
provides 5 social services - Social Security benefits, pensions etc income
maintenance and Employment Policy - Education
- Health
- Housing
- Personal Social Services
- One difference from last week we now have to
recognise that Employment Policy is key to
understanding contemporary welfare - Lets look at each in turn bearing in mind our
discussion so far today
173a what exactly does these different types of
state welfare provision do? and what are they
supposed to do?
- 1a Income Maintenance
- involves some redistribution through some state
benefits last week/session - Public expenditure on state benefits growing
despite attempts to control. 103 bn in 2003/4.
50.5bn insurance based 29.7 means tested - Increasing shift from insurance based to
assistance based (means tested) in last 25 years - Entitlement and take up rates very between
unemployed, pensioners, etc..details later in
unit - Non-take up big problem not least for social
workers working with poor users - Means testing can lead to unemployment and
poverty traps - explain - New Labour has instituted large reviews of social
security and has increased some benefits for
families and children child tax credits..but
sees principal fight against poverty as being
through getting people into employment see Case
Study
181b Employment Policy
- Not in 1940s reforms but now very important
- Merged with social security Dept of Work
Pensions - Key New Labour priority - Welfare to work key
policy initiative New Deal for unemployed more
of on next slide - EU law in conflict social programme with UK
expands British employment rights and employment
protection considerably
19New Labours New Deal
- New Labour made commitment to replace past
employment support provision with a New Deal for
the unemployed - Compulsory training and work experience aligned
to renewed commitment to help key groups gain
entry to labour market - New Deal Programmes cover
- Young People 18-24 long term unemployed lone
parents partners of unemployed disabled people
50 plus partners - This has been combined with
- Statutory minimum wage
- Working families tax credits
- Family friendly employment rights maternity
paternity leave - See Alcock P (2003) pp 124-126 for more discussion
20Employment Key for Solving Poverty for New Labour
- Implicit in the New Deal is the above assumption
- This is a contentious assumption
- No good producing employment opportunities if
people not able to take them for good welfare
reasons e.g. single parents - What will happen in periods of economic downturn
when jobs are scarce? - New Deal could be seen as WORKFARE..not WELFARE
at allbut then again principal source of
welfare is a job!
212 Education
- Universal free education provided from 1945 from
5-15now 16..next year 17 - Is free education provided to educate (liberal
view) or train (social capital view) and sort
people out into labour market allocations think
about it? Return to at end of lecture - Some levels are provided free by state primary,
secondary, further ..but higher and nursery not
completely . Should they be? - 50 to be in HE by 2007.8 in the 1960s
- Private school provision allowed
- New Labour targets extra resources to certain
schools categories of pupils
223 Health
- Improving health not necessarily same as treating
illness different policy priorities - The NHS was established in 1948 by Labour the
Conservative Party opposed. - Largely free service but has always charged for
certain services notably prescriptions - Approximately 7 million people covered by private
health insurance - Increasing encouragement development of
partnerships between private contractors and the
NHS see in particular, private finance
initiative
234 Housing
- Exploitation of tenants, over-crowding public
health issues led to initial intervention by
state against racketeer private landlords - Government accepted responsibility for providing
all with homes after 1st WW Homes Fit for
Heroes - Housing stock now primarily owner occupied
orientated just over 70 of population own
their own houses - Certain categories of homeless people have
statutory right to public housing - Much confusion about the present large scale
voluntary transfers LSVTs - of housing stock
from local authorities to housing associations - 3 scenarios will public housing still be a
public service controlled by LAs? Or Is it an
opportunity to get local democratically run
housing? Or is it the re-introduction of private
landlordism by the back door? - See Ginsburg N 2005 The Privatization of Public
Housing, Critical Social Policy, Vol 25, No 1, pp
115-135
245 Personal Social Services (a)
- Early development dominated by charitable, often
church, provision - Late 1940s statutory responsibility largely
transferred to new local authority based
Childrens, and Health and Welfare Depts - Seebohm Reforms of 1971 one generic social
service dept. Preventive social work? - Since 1990s particularly under pressure of high
profile child abuse cases gradual return to
specialisms fire fighting?
255 Personal Social Services (b)
- Work with child offenders shifts between welfare
justice approaches - All SSDs since 1990 are required to produce
community care plans - SSDs have various different names now!
- Huge decline in residential provision and shift
to community, or smaller scale, residential
provision - Mixed economy see last week now for community
care provision LAs having to purchase 85 of
their provision from private or voluntary sectors - Social care not free at point of delivery for all
but is in Scotland! - Increasing use of charges for domiciliary support
care - Some SSDs employ welfare rights workers to help
poor clients the majority to improve their
incomes through better take up of benefits
263b What are the social services supposed to do?
(a)
- This as I hope you are beginning to realise is
quite a complex question and one we cannot
really answer properly today. - But next week/session we will see that the
different welfare ideologies produce very
different answers to the question - By way of a taster..
273b What are the social services supposed to do?
(b)
- Various possible interpretations
- Literal they do that they say they do do
they? - Functionalist as industrialisation/capitalism
develops welfare services emerge to carry out
certain functionsexplain difference between
manifest latent functions see next slide for
social work - Political welfare is a combination of struggles
from below for a better life and the needs from
above - of industry for an educated, healthy
workforce - Beneficent welfare emerges in response to
awareness of hardship moral reform
28Social Work Manifest and Latent Functions
- Manifest Functions
- Services for those who through no fault of
their own fall through the welfare net - An accountable professional activity that enables
individuals, families and groups identify
personal environmental differences adversely
affecting them ( CCETW, 1991) - Protecting children and the vulnerable
- To enable social inclusion to take place
- Latent Functions?
- A social control device to police and contain
the less well off and potentially rebellious
sections of the population - A largely bureaucratic, procedural activity with
little or no professional discretion
legalistic, formal and arms length - Assessing and managing potential risk and
dangerousness - A compensatory service for those who are largely
socially excluded from large aspects of the
social order confirming their exclusion - Discuss in seminars