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A Developed Welfare State in an Unqual Society

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Title: A Developed Welfare State in an Unqual Society


1
A Developed Welfare State in an Unqual Society
  • Italy as a Case Study
  • Bolzonaro Fabio
  • Department of Sociology
  • University of Cambridge

2
  • It is commonly assumed that social expenditures
    have equalizing effects on income distribution
  • We will aspect that those contries having
    generous welfare states are also those more
    economically equal
  • Is this conclusion always confirmed?

3
Fig.1 Income inequality on a sample of OECD
countries in 2007
  • Source Eocd www.eocd.com

4

Tab. 1 Total social expenditure in some OECD
countries (percentage of GDP)
Year 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005
Country
Sweden 27.1 29.4 30.2 32.1 28.5 29.4
France 20.8 26.0 25.1 28.6 27.9 29.2
Denmark 24.8 23.2 25.1 28.9 25.8 27.1
Germany 22.6 23.2 22.2 26.5 26.2 26.8
Finland 18.0 22.5 24.1 30.9 24.3 26.1
Italy 18.0 20.9 20.0 19.9 23.2 25.0
Norway 16.9 17.8 22.3 23.2 21.3 21.6
United Kingdom 16.7 20.0 17.0 20.2 19.2 21.3
Spain 15.6 17.8 20.0 21.4 20.3 21.2
OECD Total 16.0 17.8 18.1 20.0 19.6 20.6
Greece 10.2 16.0 16.5 17.3 19.2 20.6
Slovak Republic ---- ---- ---- 18.6 17.9 16.6
Canada 13.7 17.0 18.1 18.9 16.5 16.5
United States 13.1 13.1 13.4 15.3 14.5 15.9
Mexico ---- 1.9 3.6 4.7 5.8 7.4
Portugal 10.2 10.4 13.0 17.0 19.6 ----
5
  • There seems to be a fairly consistent
    correspondence between generous welfare states
    and low levels of income inequality
  • Ex Sweden and Denemark are the two most
    economically equal societies and, at the same
    time, they have two of the most developed systems
    of social protection
  • Conversely limited welfare regimes are typical
    of the more unequal societies (Mexico, US etc)
  • However Mediterranean countries and in particular
    Italy partially contradict this general
    conclusion
  • from 1980 to 2005 the Italian total social
    expenditure increased of 7 of its GDP reaching
    the level of 25
  • at the same time, from the biginning of 1980s
    income inequality in Italy steadly increased
    registering between 1986 and 1989 rates not
    dissimilar to those of the US and the UK

6
Are Welfare States Always Redistributive?
  • We should question any straightforward link
    between higher levels of social spending and more
    income redistribution (Esping-Andersen, 2009,
    644)
  • The common assumption that the welfare state has
    always redistributive impacts derives from a
    misunderstanding of what a wefare state is
  • Any system of social protection has at least two
    purposes
  • it spreads risks and benefits along the
    life-cycle
  • it spreads risks and benefits between different
    social groups
  • The second dimension has a very limited
    redistributive impact and it generally absorbs
    the largest portion of the social expenditure in
    the majority of contemporary welfare regimes

7
  • A welfare state is an answer to basic and
    long-term developmental processes and the
    problems created by themit is a general
    phenomenon of modernisation on the one hand and
    of processes of social and political mobilisation
    on the other (Flora, 1981, 8). The
    competitive political dimension is an essential
    perspective to understand the role and fuctions
    of any system of social protectionWelfare
    states are instruments of social
    stratificationEsping-Andersen (1990) cosiders
    the Italian welfare state as a typical
    conservative regime. As such its main
    characterestics are
  • preservation of status differntials
  • strong role of the family
  • preservation of gender discrimination

8
A Very Unbalanced Welfare State
  • Although some incisive reforms in the 1990s the
    Italian welfare states still presents its
    traditional features
  • According to Ferrera ( 2007) it is possible to
    individuate by two main distorsions
  • an unbalanced distribution between different
    risks (funtional distrosion)
  • an unbalanced distribution of benefits between
    different social categories (distributive
    distorsion)
  • These two anomalies can be recognised by
    comparing the Italian distribution of social
    expenditure by function with the average spending
    of other European countries

9
Source Eurostat ec.europa.eu/eurostat
  • Fig. 2 Social Expenditure by function in
    Italy in 2006

  • (percentage values on total social
    expenditure)

10
  • In 2006 Italy spent around 60 of its total
    budget in old age and survivors pension in
    contrast with an European average of 46
  • What is more impressive is the limited funding
    destinated to other periods of the life-cycle or
    voices having a potentially stronger
    redistributive impact
  • Family policies are quite under-represented
    although their crucial role in overcoming
    different forms of social inequality and the high
    incidence of child poverty in Italy. The largest
    part of social services are administrated at
    local level. As a consequence there are great
    disparities among different geographical areas

11
Tab. 2 Poverty rates in 2007 in some OECD
countries
  • __________________________________________________
    ____________________________________
  • Country All Children Children in Two Parent
    Below 60 of population median Families
  • __________________________________________________
    ____________________________________
  • United States 23.8 30.2 14.8
  • United Kingdom (1999) 22.0 28.8 11.2
  • Greece 21.3 18.7 11.7
  • Spain 20.8 24.0 14.6
  • Italy 20.0 26.4 16.4
  • France 13.7 15.9 5.1
  • Germany 13.4 14.2 4.7
  • Denmark 13.4 14.1 2.0

12
Reforms with inequalitiesA closer consideration
of the Italian pension reforms
  • Italian pension have traditionally been very
    generous
  • A political bargain between different forces
    aimed at preserving their national and local
    costituencies and clienteles lies behind the
    over-exmpansion of the pension system
  • If it is generally true that the redistributive
    impact of old age pensions is quite limited, to a
    certain extent the Italian context is an
    execption with this regard. Becasue of the
    limited economic support offered by public
    institution to younger generations, old age
    pensions have become the main source of an
    informal channel of income redistribution within
    the same family

13
  • Putting into question the equality of Italian the
    pension system means considering the equality of
    an important, although informal, part of whole
    the Italian system of social protection
  • The first half of the 1990s has seen the approval
    of two major pension reforms aimed at
  • introducing more uniformity and equality
  • garanting the long-term financial sustainability
    of the system
  • Have these reforms promoted more equality?

14
The Traditional Features of the Italian Pension
System untile the Beginning of the 1990s
  • Until the reforms of the 1990s the Italian
    pension system still presented its traditional
    features
  • It was organized along occupational lines
  • it was administrated by many different
    institutions having their own rules in terms of
    contribution and benefits
  • it was an highly fragmented system with evident
    privileges especially in favour of public workers

15
  • Amato Reform 1992
  • Introduced by the Prime Minister Amato, it had
    two important results
  • it harmonized the pension regime between private
    and public workers
  • it changed the reference period on the basis of
    which to calculate the future amount of the
    pension. The new regime will be only applied to
    new entrants in the labour market
  • Dini Reform 1995
  • after the defeat of the first Berlusconi
    government which tired to introduce a more
    incisive pension reform, the new appointed Prime
    Minister, after a strenuous bargain with labour
    unions reached an agreement for a new reform. Two
    important aspects affecting the equality of the
    whole system should be underlined
  • the passage to a contributory related mechanism
    to calculate the future pension
  • the new method of calculus will particularly
    affected workers, especially women and young
    people, having precarious and low paid jobs
    during their professional career (Ferrera, 2007)
  • the reform will start to be implemented only in
    2013 and it will be fully operative in 2035

16
A Sort of Conclusion
  • Some points I would like to remark after this
    brief analysis of the Italian welfare state
  • devoting the largest part of social expenditure
    to old age pensions and a very limited part to
    other voices implies a clear inter-generational
    inequality
  • Italian families are asked to assumed excessive
    responsabilities to garantee a sort of safety
    net. This is especially true for low and medium
    income families
  • Demographic changes will put into question the
    future sustanability of the Italian system of
    social protection
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