ABSTRACT

East Asia is at the heart of the global economic transformation, and the countries of the region are witnessing rapidly changing labour markets, alongside the pressure to cut production costs and lower taxes in order to become successful ‘competition states’. These changes have resulted in increased welfare demands which governments, organizations and agencies across the region have had to address.

This book examines welfare regimes in the Greater China region, encompassing mainland China, Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan. In so doing, it explores the ways in which the rapid growth and internationalisation of the economy across Greater China is presenting new social policy challenges that governments, social welfare organizations and agencies in the region are having to respond to. Rather than simply describing and categorising welfare systems, the contributors to this volume add to our understanding of how one of the major economic transformations of the contemporary era in East Asia is shaping welfare provision in the region. In turn, in this context of economic change, they examine the new strategies and measures that have been adopted in order to reduce the heavy burden on the state in terms of welfare provision, whilst also attempting to diversify funding and provision sources to meet the pressing welfare needs.

Based upon extensive fieldwork by leading scholars of social policy, this book will appeal to students and scholars of Asian social policy, comparative development and social policy, social welfare and Chinese studies.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

The search for a new social policy paradigm: managing changing social expectations and welfare regimes in transition in Greater China

chapter 2|19 pages

After the regional and global financial crises

Social development challenges and social policy responses in Hong Kong and Macau

chapter 4|23 pages

Economic insecurity and social protection for labour

The limitations of Hong Kong's adhocism during the financial crises

chapter 5|26 pages

Challenges for the developmental welfare regime in Taiwan

From authoritarianism to democratic governance

chapter 6|15 pages

Bringing the state back in

The development of Chinese social policy in China in the Hu-Wen Era

chapter 7|15 pages

Asserting the “public” in welfare provision

A study of resident evaluation and expectation of social services in Guangzhou, China

chapter 8|21 pages

Social Policy in the Macao Special Administrative Region of China

A case of regulatory welfare regime

chapter 9|23 pages

Old age care concerns and state–society relations in China

Public anxiety and state paternalism

chapter 10|21 pages

Public–private pension mix and its governance

Japan and Taiwan compared