The Divided Welfare State: The Battle Over Public and Private Social Benefits in the United StatesCambridge University Press, 2002 M09 9 - 447 pages The Divided Welfare State is the first comprehensive political analysis of America's distinctive system of public and private social benefits. Everyone knows that the American welfare state is unusual--less expensive and extensive, later to develop and slower to grow, than comparable programs abroad. Yet, U.S. social policy does not stand out solely for its limits. American social spending is actually as high as spending is in many European nations. What is truly distinctive is that so many social welfare duties are handled not by the state, but by the private sector with government support. With sweeping historical reach and a wealth of statistical and cross-national evidence, The Divided Welfare State demonstrates that private social benefits have not merely been shaped by public policy, but have deeply influenced the politics of public social programs--to produce a social policy framework whose political and social effects are strikingly different than often assumed. At a time of fierce new debates about social policy, this book is essential to understanding the roots of America's distinctive model and its future possibilities. Jacob S. Hacker is the Peter Strauss Family Assistant Profesor of Political Science at Yale University. Previously, he was a Junior Fellow of the Harvard Society of Fellows and Fellow at the New America Foundation as well as a Guest Scholar and Research Fellow at the Brookings Institution. He is the author of The Road to Nowhere: The Genesis of President Clinton's Plan for Health Security (Princeton, 1997), which was co-winner of the 1997 Louis Brownlow Book Award of the National Academy of Public Administration. His articles and opinion pieces have appeared in The New Republic, The Nation, the Los Angeles Times, Boston Globe, and Washington Post. A regular media commentator, he has discussed his work widely on C-Span, national public radio and in papers nationwide. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 66
Page vii
... Approaches 1.2 Share of Nonagricultural Private Workers Receiving Health and Pension Benefits , by Earnings , 1998 page 19 30 1.3 Distribution of Selected Tax Expenditures , 2000 1.4 Average Tax Subsidy for Health Insurance Received by ...
... Approaches 1.2 Share of Nonagricultural Private Workers Receiving Health and Pension Benefits , by Earnings , 1998 page 19 30 1.3 Distribution of Selected Tax Expenditures , 2000 1.4 Average Tax Subsidy for Health Insurance Received by ...
Page ix
... Approaches 1.3 Institutional Fragmentation and the Private Share of Social Spending 12.1 Occupational Pension and Old - Age Insurance Benefits as a Share of Combined Benefits , 1950-1996 12.2 Share of Americans Covered by Social ...
... Approaches 1.3 Institutional Fragmentation and the Private Share of Social Spending 12.1 Occupational Pension and Old - Age Insurance Benefits as a Share of Combined Benefits , 1950-1996 12.2 Share of Americans Covered by Social ...
Page xiii
... approach that explains how the different characteristics of alternative approaches make for very different politics as well . Yet there is a second reason for bringing these aspects of U.S. social policy into our conceptions of social ...
... approach that explains how the different characteristics of alternative approaches make for very different politics as well . Yet there is a second reason for bringing these aspects of U.S. social policy into our conceptions of social ...
Page 11
... approaches are scarcely identical , and in fact , a major argument of this book is that their political and distribu- tional characteristics differ substantially . But the difference is not that one counts as government intervention and ...
... approaches are scarcely identical , and in fact , a major argument of this book is that their political and distribu- tional characteristics differ substantially . But the difference is not that one counts as government intervention and ...
Page 20
... Approach of the Book 30 If the exceptionalism of the American welfare regime is tied up with the extensive presence of private social provision within it , then the task of the analyst is considerably more difficult than students of ...
... Approach of the Book 30 If the exceptionalism of the American welfare regime is tied up with the extensive presence of private social provision within it , then the task of the analyst is considerably more difficult than students of ...
Contents
The Politics of Public and Private Social Benefits | 28 |
The Politics of Public and Private Pensions | 67 |
Introduction | 71 |
Connected at Birth Public and Private Pensions Before 1945 | 85 |
Sibling Rivalry Public and Private Pensions After 1945 | 124 |
The Politics of Public and Private Health Insurance | 175 |
Introduction | 179 |
Seeds of Exceptionalism Public and Private Health Insurance Before 1945 | 191 |
Other editions - View all
The Divided Welfare State: The Battle Over Public and Private Social ... Jacob S. Hacker No preview available - 2002 |
Common terms and phrases
Adema Altmeyer American Political American welfare regime ance approaches Blue Cross Cambridge Clark amendment Committee Congress congressional conservative corporate costs coverage created debate Democrats economic effects employers employment-based ERISA expansion favor federal finance Folsom fringe benefits fund groups historical Industrial institutions leaders legislation major Medicare ment national health insurance OECD old-age insurance path dependence Paul Pierson pension plans percent Political Science Princeton University Press private benefits private health insurance private insurance private pensions private plans private social benefits private social insurance proposals public and private public policy public programs public social programs reform regulation Retirement Income risk role sector Senate social insurance social protection Social Security Act Social Security Administration Social Security's social spending social welfare SSAHA structure tax expenditures tax subsidies tax treatment Theda Skocpol tion U.S. social policy unions United voluntary wage Washington Washington D.C. Welfare Capitalism workers York