ABSTRACT

First Published in 1943, Social Security critically examines the arrangements for providing pensions, insurance benefits, allowances and compensation to the vast mass of wage earners and their dependants. Divided into two parts, it discusses crucial themes like the fundamentals of social security; unemployment and health insurance; pension schemes for widows, orphans, the blind, and the aged; the system of workmen’s compensation; superannuation schemes; pensions for the members of armed forces and civilians suffering war injuries and public assistance and the work of the assistance board. This comprehensive book is a must read for scholars and researchers of political economy, British economy, and labour economics.

part |277 pages

The Present

chapter Chapter I|23 pages

Public Assistance

chapter Chapter II|27 pages

Workmen's Compensation

chapter Chapter III|37 pages

National Health Insurance

chapter IV|13 pages

Unemployment Insurance

chapter V|28 pages

The Assistance Board

chapter seven|12 pages

Blind Welfare in England and Wales

chapter Eight|30 pages

War Pensions

chapter Chapter IX|26 pages

Finance of the Social Services

chapter Chapter X|11 pages

Superannuation

chapter Chapter XI|28 pages

Industrial Life Assurance

part |143 pages

The Beveridge Report and After

chapter Chapter XII|56 pages

The Beveridge Report and After

chapter XIII|45 pages

Social Security Housekeeping

chapter XIV|22 pages

The Staff Problem

chapter |20 pages

Epilogue