The transition of welfare state commitment : understanding the dynamics of contraction in state welfare
(2001) Conference on Ageing, Care and Welfare of Elderly and how IT can improve Quality of Life” 2001(3).- Abstract
- In the 1990s a contraction in state welfare in Sweden has been on its way and still seems to be
so by joining forces. With focus on understanding the dynamics involved in the contractionprocess
this paper aims to discuss the transition of welfare state commitment in Sweden. On
the general level it should be seen as an attempt to adress the enigmatic and puzzeling
questions of: How to explain change in social policy? How to understand local differences in
the scope and directions of welfare programs?
Over the 1990s we have been witnessing a more sceptical attitude towards the provision of
state welfare. It has been argued that state welfare surpresses free choice and that... (More) - In the 1990s a contraction in state welfare in Sweden has been on its way and still seems to be
so by joining forces. With focus on understanding the dynamics involved in the contractionprocess
this paper aims to discuss the transition of welfare state commitment in Sweden. On
the general level it should be seen as an attempt to adress the enigmatic and puzzeling
questions of: How to explain change in social policy? How to understand local differences in
the scope and directions of welfare programs?
Over the 1990s we have been witnessing a more sceptical attitude towards the provision of
state welfare. It has been argued that state welfare surpresses free choice and that budget
deficits and tax burdens have become obstacles to extensive public committments. Closely
linked to this (neo-liberal) thinking is the incentive-driven approach to the problems of public
welfare, grounded in neo-classical economic theory. Focusing on individual behavior in terms
of scrounging, dependancy, lack of responsibility and praise of market-solutions, the new
discourse has replaced the traditional socialdemocratic rethorics of autonomy, redistribution
and equality. The effect of this new focus is seen both in the general shifts of policy and in
research. However, in this paper we will take on another aspect of the transition of welfare
state commitment. The contraction process and the understanding of its dynamics, will lead
on to the arena of local priorities and adjustments. The empirical data referred to are primarely
data from ongoing research of local and organizational processes of adjustment and priority
setting in the area of elderly care in Sweden in the 1990s (Blomberg, Edebalk och Petersson
2000). Basically it is a comparative study of a strategic selection of eight Swedish
municipalities. Four of them characterized by extensive reorganization i.e. change in user
patterns of home help services and the other four, constituting a reference group, without
such changes. The approach is largely retrospective, concerning the years 1992-2000.
Interviews with local politicians, administrators, professionals and representatives of the
unions and of the elderly were the main sources of data. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/531713
- author
- Petersson, Jan LU and Blomberg, Staffan LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2001
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- host publication
- Working paper-serien
- volume
- 2001
- issue
- 3
- publisher
- Lunds universitet : Socialhögskolan
- conference name
- Conference on Ageing, Care and Welfare of Elderly and how IT can improve Quality of Life”
- conference dates
- 2001-05-07 - 2001-05-10
- ISBN
- 91-89604-07-5
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- d93ed877-e664-4361-9b3e-255d102c97e0 (old id 531713)
- alternative location
- http://www.soch.lu.se/images/Socialhogskolan/WP2001_3.pdf
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 10:48:38
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:00:54
@inproceedings{d93ed877-e664-4361-9b3e-255d102c97e0, abstract = {{In the 1990s a contraction in state welfare in Sweden has been on its way and still seems to be<br/><br> so by joining forces. With focus on understanding the dynamics involved in the contractionprocess<br/><br> this paper aims to discuss the transition of welfare state commitment in Sweden. On<br/><br> the general level it should be seen as an attempt to adress the enigmatic and puzzeling<br/><br> questions of: How to explain change in social policy? How to understand local differences in<br/><br> the scope and directions of welfare programs?<br/><br> Over the 1990s we have been witnessing a more sceptical attitude towards the provision of<br/><br> state welfare. It has been argued that state welfare surpresses free choice and that budget<br/><br> deficits and tax burdens have become obstacles to extensive public committments. Closely<br/><br> linked to this (neo-liberal) thinking is the incentive-driven approach to the problems of public<br/><br> welfare, grounded in neo-classical economic theory. Focusing on individual behavior in terms<br/><br> of scrounging, dependancy, lack of responsibility and praise of market-solutions, the new<br/><br> discourse has replaced the traditional socialdemocratic rethorics of autonomy, redistribution<br/><br> and equality. The effect of this new focus is seen both in the general shifts of policy and in<br/><br> research. However, in this paper we will take on another aspect of the transition of welfare<br/><br> state commitment. The contraction process and the understanding of its dynamics, will lead<br/><br> on to the arena of local priorities and adjustments. The empirical data referred to are primarely<br/><br> data from ongoing research of local and organizational processes of adjustment and priority<br/><br> setting in the area of elderly care in Sweden in the 1990s (Blomberg, Edebalk och Petersson<br/><br> 2000). Basically it is a comparative study of a strategic selection of eight Swedish<br/><br> municipalities. Four of them characterized by extensive reorganization i.e. change in user<br/><br> patterns of home help services and the other four, constituting a reference group, without<br/><br> such changes. The approach is largely retrospective, concerning the years 1992-2000.<br/><br> Interviews with local politicians, administrators, professionals and representatives of the<br/><br> unions and of the elderly were the main sources of data.}}, author = {{Petersson, Jan and Blomberg, Staffan}}, booktitle = {{Working paper-serien}}, isbn = {{91-89604-07-5}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{3}}, publisher = {{Lunds universitet : Socialhögskolan}}, title = {{The transition of welfare state commitment : understanding the dynamics of contraction in state welfare}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/5626503/625217.pdf}}, volume = {{2001}}, year = {{2001}}, }