1st Edition

Pension Politics Consensus and Social Conflict in Ageing Societies

By Patrik Marier Copyright 2008
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    Population ageing and slower economic growth have raised serious questions about the willingness and ability of governments to maintain current social policies. Within this new reality, discussions on the future of public pensions have been predominant in political debates across Europe.

    This book explains why certain countries have been able to radically transform their pension system while others have simply altered parameters. To answer this question an extensive comparative analysis, including more than 60 interviews, was conducted in Belgium, France, Sweden and the UK. This empirical data provides an interesting contrast between reforms. Parametric reforms have stemmed from the creation of pension administrations outside the traditional state apparatus in France and Belgium and the resulting inclusion of social partners; while the state administrations of Sweden and the UK where debates have been internalised have led to programmatic reforms. Two controversial findings of this book include an explanation for the lack of influence on the part of the labour movement in the 1994/98 Swedish reform and a rejection of arguments claiming that policy change will be minimal with coalition governments. Finally the conclusion seeks to extend the applicability of the model to other industrialized countries.

    This book will be of interest to students and scholars of public policy, specifically social policy, political economy, the welfare state and comparative politics.

    Introduction: Policy Change in Difficult Times  1. The Origins of Diversity in Pension Reform Processes: A Theoretical Approach  2. France: Still a 'Société Bloquée'?  3. Belgium: Seeking to Adapt in a Crumbling Consensual World, One Small Step at a Time  4. Sweden: Do Unions Still Matter?: Committees Instil a Radical Pension Reform  5. United Kingdom: A Marriage with the Private Sector?  6. Conclusion: Comparative Tests of the Hypotheses and their Application to other Industrialized Countries

    Biography

    Patrik Marier is Canada Research Chair in Comparative Public Policy in the Department of Political Science at Concordia University, Canada. 

    "A splendid addition to the scholarly literature." -- H. I. Liebling, emeritus, Lafayette College