ABSTRACT

First published in 1998, this study offers a survey of the conceptual background, the political dimension, and the macroeconomic context and constraints of the social security system in Israel, which in four decades (since the mid-1950s) grew virtually from scratch into a comprehensive system, similar in scope to that of Western and Northern Europe, North America, the European outposts in the antipodes and, of course, Japan.

chapter 1|2 pages

The Post-War New Socio-Economic Order

chapter 3|22 pages

The Emergence of Social Security:

The Israeli Variety

chapter 6|16 pages

The Frontier of Welfare States in the 1990s:

Implications for Israel