TY - CHAP
T1 - Introduction: social investments and welfare reform in Europe and East Asia
AU - Choi, Young Jun
AU - Fleckenstein, Timo
AU - Lee, Soohyun Christine
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Bristol University Press 2021.
Copyright:
Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/2/26
Y1 - 2021/2/26
N2 - Across the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) world, social investment policies are expanding, which Hemerijck (2015) describes as a ‘quiet paradigm revolution’. Nordic countries are widely considered the pioneers in social investment policies – with Sweden having already embarked on progressive policies during the post-war era and thus presenting the longest track record of remarkable social investments (Morel et al, 2012). Much attention has been paid to Sweden's ambitious, active labour market policies, which are aimed at upskilling workers, and the country's employment-oriented family policies (most notably childcare provisions, but also parental leave schemes helping with work–family reconciliation), which promote mothers’ participation in the labour market. In addition to its extensive childcare provisions, the country's comprehensive education and healthcare systems have earned Sweden recognition as a ‘social service state’ (Huber and Stephens, 2001).While Nordic countries remain the frontrunners, with the greatest financial commitment to social investment policies (Kuitto, 2016), we observe that latecomers from not only Continental Europe and the Anglo-Saxon world, but also East Asia, have made considerable efforts to catch up with the Northern European pioneers. The rise of social investments, especially the expansion of employment-oriented family policy (Lewis et al, 2008; Ferragina and Seeleib-Kaiser, 2015), presents an important dimension of the recent transformation of advanced welfare capitalism, which, despite the prominence of retrenchment, cannot be reduced to welfare state regress. For instance, Germany, which has a long legacy of promoting traditional families, made considerable efforts to expand its childcare provisions (including childcare for those under three years of age), in addition to introducing an earnings-related parental leave scheme that largely resembles the Swedish leave policy. The United Kingdom has also seen a remarkable rise of early childhood education and care, where the government had previously rejected any responsibility for the family because it was considered a ‘private matter’ into which the state had no right to intervene. Childcare policies are also prominently featured in East Asia, even though Japan and South Korea, with their strong Confucian legacies, have had a rather long history of traditional approaches to family that strongly resemble the historical Continental European experience rooted in Catholicism.
AB - Across the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) world, social investment policies are expanding, which Hemerijck (2015) describes as a ‘quiet paradigm revolution’. Nordic countries are widely considered the pioneers in social investment policies – with Sweden having already embarked on progressive policies during the post-war era and thus presenting the longest track record of remarkable social investments (Morel et al, 2012). Much attention has been paid to Sweden's ambitious, active labour market policies, which are aimed at upskilling workers, and the country's employment-oriented family policies (most notably childcare provisions, but also parental leave schemes helping with work–family reconciliation), which promote mothers’ participation in the labour market. In addition to its extensive childcare provisions, the country's comprehensive education and healthcare systems have earned Sweden recognition as a ‘social service state’ (Huber and Stephens, 2001).While Nordic countries remain the frontrunners, with the greatest financial commitment to social investment policies (Kuitto, 2016), we observe that latecomers from not only Continental Europe and the Anglo-Saxon world, but also East Asia, have made considerable efforts to catch up with the Northern European pioneers. The rise of social investments, especially the expansion of employment-oriented family policy (Lewis et al, 2008; Ferragina and Seeleib-Kaiser, 2015), presents an important dimension of the recent transformation of advanced welfare capitalism, which, despite the prominence of retrenchment, cannot be reduced to welfare state regress. For instance, Germany, which has a long legacy of promoting traditional families, made considerable efforts to expand its childcare provisions (including childcare for those under three years of age), in addition to introducing an earnings-related parental leave scheme that largely resembles the Swedish leave policy. The United Kingdom has also seen a remarkable rise of early childhood education and care, where the government had previously rejected any responsibility for the family because it was considered a ‘private matter’ into which the state had no right to intervene. Childcare policies are also prominently featured in East Asia, even though Japan and South Korea, with their strong Confucian legacies, have had a rather long history of traditional approaches to family that strongly resemble the historical Continental European experience rooted in Catholicism.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85104878383&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/abs/welfare-reform-and-social-investment-policy/introduction-social-investments-and-welfare-reform-in-europe-and-east-asia/98CFDF054E3D77C13D4F4B0936E95976
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85104878383
SN - 9781447352730
BT - Welfare Reform and Social Investment Policy in Europe and East Asia
A2 - Choi, Young Yun
A2 - Fleckenstein, Timo
A2 - Lee, Soohyun Christine
PB - Policy Press
ER -