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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The demise of universality: the politics of federal income security in Canada, 1978-1993

Phillips, Stephen 05 1900 (has links)
Research by political scientists on the modern welfare state focuses on its historical development and on the emergence of distinctive welfare state regimes. Research conducted in the past decade has also been concerned with the implications for the welfare state of the recurrent crises which have afflicted western economies since the late 1970's. However, while the politics of building welfare states are now better understood, there remains little systematic study of the politics of their retrenchment, a phenomenon which has been under way for the past two decades in most advanced capitalist states. This study examines the politics of retrenchment in Canada over the period 1978 to 1993. Focusing on three categories of federal income security programmes (family benefits, retirement income programmes, and Unemployment Insurance), the thesis describes a gradual shift in programme design away from universality and toward greater selectivity. Concomitant with this development was an increasing reliance on the tax system as an instrument of social policy. Applying Gosta Esping-Andersen's analysis of welfare state regimes, the thesis contends that the cumulative effect of programme retrenchment during this period was to reinforce the liberal-residualist character of Canada's welfare state at the expense of its social democratic aspects. In an effort to explain the process of welfare state retrenchment in Canada, within and between different categories of income security programmes, the thesis tests hypotheses associated with three major approaches to the study of public policy: class analysis, institutionalism, and pluralism. The thesis concludes that retrenchment in Canada was broadly facilitated by a decline in the political power resources of labour in relation to those of business. Because of the weakness of the relevant non-class pressure groups, pluralism is of limited value in explaining retrenchment outcomes. Insights into more specific patterns of retrenchment are gained from two institutionalist perspectives. The first of these, a state-centred approach, draws attention to the larger role in social policy-making that was assumed by the Department of Finance, the chief fiscal guardian of the Federal Government. The second perspective, a rational choice theory developed by Paul Pierson, provides insight into the manner in which certain retrenchment measures were formulated. Based on Kent Weaver's blame-avoidance thesis, Pierson's model provides a persuasive explanation for the reliance of Canadian governments on arcane changes to tax rules and indexation formulae as an instrument of retrenchment. Since each of the analyses provides at best only a partial explanation for the politics of welfare state retrenchment, the thesis proposes the scheme of an integrated approach which incorporates the explanatory power of class analysis and institutionalism.
2

Income support programs and labour market behaviour in Canada

Whelan, Stephen Patrick 05 1900 (has links)
Income support programs constitute an integral component of modern labour markets and represent significant fiscal commitments on the part of governments. This thesis examines two key income support programs in Canada and their impact on labour market outcomes, namely employment insurance (EI) and social assistance (SA). Together expenditures on EI and SA represented approximately 2 per cent of Canadian GDP in 1998-99 and influenced a range of labour market decisions relating to labour force participation, employment and unemployment spells. The analysis in this thesis provides new evidence on the role of the EI and SA programs on labour market outcomes by examining the interface between the programs and labour market behaviour. An analysis of the take-up of SA amongst a sample of SA eligible individuals is also undertaken that provides new evidence on the determinants of participation in the SA program in Canada. The analysis in this thesis uses the 1997 Canadian Out of Employment Panel dataset, a unique dataset that provides detailed information on the use of income support programs and employment patterns, and detailed information on a rich set of personal and household characteristics. The approach adopted in this thesis is to use a generalized probability transition model to examine the nature of the interface between income support programs and their effect on labour market outcomes. This approach allows the implications of changes in either program for use of the other program, and overall labour market outcomes, to be identified. The analysis of the SA take-up decision uses a discrete choice framework that explicitly takes account of the potential endogeneity of benefit levels available to the individual. A number of conclusions can be drawn from the analysis undertaken in this thesis. First, when the generosity of the SA program is reduced, individuals decrease use of both the SA and EI programs. Conversely, reducing the generosity of the EI program results in an increase in the use, albeit relatively small, of the SA program. The results of the analysis of the take-up decision of the SA program point to the key role of benefit levels and previous use of the program as determinants of the likelihood that an individual takes up SA.
3

Income support programs and labour market behaviour in Canada

Whelan, Stephen Patrick 05 1900 (has links)
Income support programs constitute an integral component of modern labour markets and represent significant fiscal commitments on the part of governments. This thesis examines two key income support programs in Canada and their impact on labour market outcomes, namely employment insurance (EI) and social assistance (SA). Together expenditures on EI and SA represented approximately 2 per cent of Canadian GDP in 1998-99 and influenced a range of labour market decisions relating to labour force participation, employment and unemployment spells. The analysis in this thesis provides new evidence on the role of the EI and SA programs on labour market outcomes by examining the interface between the programs and labour market behaviour. An analysis of the take-up of SA amongst a sample of SA eligible individuals is also undertaken that provides new evidence on the determinants of participation in the SA program in Canada. The analysis in this thesis uses the 1997 Canadian Out of Employment Panel dataset, a unique dataset that provides detailed information on the use of income support programs and employment patterns, and detailed information on a rich set of personal and household characteristics. The approach adopted in this thesis is to use a generalized probability transition model to examine the nature of the interface between income support programs and their effect on labour market outcomes. This approach allows the implications of changes in either program for use of the other program, and overall labour market outcomes, to be identified. The analysis of the SA take-up decision uses a discrete choice framework that explicitly takes account of the potential endogeneity of benefit levels available to the individual. A number of conclusions can be drawn from the analysis undertaken in this thesis. First, when the generosity of the SA program is reduced, individuals decrease use of both the SA and EI programs. Conversely, reducing the generosity of the EI program results in an increase in the use, albeit relatively small, of the SA program. The results of the analysis of the take-up decision of the SA program point to the key role of benefit levels and previous use of the program as determinants of the likelihood that an individual takes up SA. / Arts, Faculty of / Vancouver School of Economics / Graduate
4

The demise of universality: the politics of federal income security in Canada, 1978-1993

Phillips, Stephen 05 1900 (has links)
Research by political scientists on the modern welfare state focuses on its historical development and on the emergence of distinctive welfare state regimes. Research conducted in the past decade has also been concerned with the implications for the welfare state of the recurrent crises which have afflicted western economies since the late 1970's. However, while the politics of building welfare states are now better understood, there remains little systematic study of the politics of their retrenchment, a phenomenon which has been under way for the past two decades in most advanced capitalist states. This study examines the politics of retrenchment in Canada over the period 1978 to 1993. Focusing on three categories of federal income security programmes (family benefits, retirement income programmes, and Unemployment Insurance), the thesis describes a gradual shift in programme design away from universality and toward greater selectivity. Concomitant with this development was an increasing reliance on the tax system as an instrument of social policy. Applying Gosta Esping-Andersen's analysis of welfare state regimes, the thesis contends that the cumulative effect of programme retrenchment during this period was to reinforce the liberal-residualist character of Canada's welfare state at the expense of its social democratic aspects. In an effort to explain the process of welfare state retrenchment in Canada, within and between different categories of income security programmes, the thesis tests hypotheses associated with three major approaches to the study of public policy: class analysis, institutionalism, and pluralism. The thesis concludes that retrenchment in Canada was broadly facilitated by a decline in the political power resources of labour in relation to those of business. Because of the weakness of the relevant non-class pressure groups, pluralism is of limited value in explaining retrenchment outcomes. Insights into more specific patterns of retrenchment are gained from two institutionalist perspectives. The first of these, a state-centred approach, draws attention to the larger role in social policy-making that was assumed by the Department of Finance, the chief fiscal guardian of the Federal Government. The second perspective, a rational choice theory developed by Paul Pierson, provides insight into the manner in which certain retrenchment measures were formulated. Based on Kent Weaver's blame-avoidance thesis, Pierson's model provides a persuasive explanation for the reliance of Canadian governments on arcane changes to tax rules and indexation formulae as an instrument of retrenchment. Since each of the analyses provides at best only a partial explanation for the politics of welfare state retrenchment, the thesis proposes the scheme of an integrated approach which incorporates the explanatory power of class analysis and institutionalism. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate

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