ABSTRACT

Advanced welfare states are said to be facing, in the words of Pierre Rosanvallon, a New Social Question. The idea here, and it is a widely shared one, is that the transition from an industrial to a postindustrial environment has brought with it a whole new set of social risks, constraints and trade-offs which necessitate radical recalibration of social security systems. This book analyses in some depth how economic change has impacted on minimum income protection in advanced welfare states. There is a particular focus on how Bismarckian welfare states have fared over recent decades.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

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part 1|74 pages

The Decline of Self-Reliance and the Labour Demand Shift against the Less-Skilled: Conjectures, Facts and Explanations

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chapter 2|34 pages

The Demand Shift against the Less-Skilled

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part 2|69 pages

New Social Risks, Poverty and the Adequacy of Social Protection

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part 3|70 pages

New Policy Responses Assessed

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chapter 5|29 pages

How Responsive Are Poverty Rates to Job Growth?

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chapter |7 pages

Overall Conclusion

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