ABSTRACT

In many Western countries, social welfare payments are increasingly being made conditional on recipients doing voluntary work or attending job training courses, a system known as "welfare-to-work" or "workfare". Although social welfare in Asia is very different to the West, with much smaller social welfare budgets, a strong self-reliance and a much higher dependency on family networks to provide support, the workfare approach is also being adopted in many Asian countries. This is the first book to provide a comprehensive overview of how welfare reform around work is implemented in leading East Asian.

Based on the experiences of seven East Asian economies - including China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong and Macau - this book critically analyses current trends; the social, economic and political factors which lead to the implementation of workfare; compares the similarities and differences of workfare in the different polities and assesses their effectiveness.

part |134 pages

Workfare in Seven East Asian Economies

chapter |24 pages

Workfare in Mainland China

A Reaction to Welfare Dependency?

chapter |18 pages

From Workfare to Cash for All

The Politics of Welfare Reform in Macau

chapter |22 pages

Workfare in Taiwan

From Social Assistance to Unemployment Absorber

chapter |16 pages

Workfare in South Korea

Delivering Unemployment Benefits in the Developmental Welfare State

part |18 pages

Conclusion

chapter |16 pages

Workfare in East Asia

Development and Characteristics