1 / 10

THE GLOBAL CRISES AND THEIR IMPACT- The Future of Welfare State

THE GLOBAL CRISES AND THEIR IMPACT- The Future of Welfare State. Juho Saari Professor University of Kuopio, Finland juho.saari@uku.fi. I. DIFFICULT TIMES. The global recession is becoming more likely regardless of stimulus packages.

plato-olsen
Télécharger la présentation

THE GLOBAL CRISES AND THEIR IMPACT- The Future of Welfare State

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE GLOBAL CRISES AND THEIR IMPACT- The Future of Welfare State Juho Saari Professor University of Kuopio, Finland juho.saari@uku.fi (c) Juho Saari 2009

  2. I. DIFFICULT TIMES • The global recession is becoming more likely regardless of stimulus packages. • It will last at least three to four years, and will result in major adjustment in employment and industries. • Massive social costs of creative destruction and economic transformation . • But the majority of individuals and companies will probably survive intact - the winners will be better-off. • A few good news in the field of social development. (c) Juho Saari 2009

  3. 2. THE CHALLENGES OF PUBLIC ECONOMIES • Excessive public deficits in most advanced societies/economies - but not everywhere, indicating major shifts in a global system; • Public economies in additional heavy debts for 10-20 years. • The crowding out of social expenditure and ODA of public expenditure in many growth-oriented economies/societies. • Fiscal stimulus, national innovation systems, growth and employment policies, education • Tax cuts? (we are all Keynesians now) • The collapse or cut-throat competition of the charities. (c) Juho Saari 2009

  4. 3. THIS CAN BE A WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY • The recession also means opportunities. Q: who shall be able to exploit this opportunity socio-politically? • How to protect ODA and social expenditure? • At least temporarily changing the balance of power in capitals and the BW institutions between different policy proposals. • The state will invervene and regulate financial markets and some industrial sectors more efficiently, and will become a major shareholder in many industries. • Historical evidence indicates that the rapid world systems, socio-economic and institututional transformations stimulate new thinking in social development. (c) Juho Saari 2009

  5. 4. A CASE OF FINLAND:A successful adjustment of comprehensive social policy is possible. (c) Juho Saari 2009

  6. 5. REINVENTING THE WHEEL I - A policy paradigm for social development • A semi-new paradigm in development thinking on the institutional design of the markets and public policies: focus on adaptive efficiency. • In advanced economies (at least) national models with policy complementaries are quite path-dependent structures - one size/policy package does not fit for all. • Something to learn?: Scandinavian models are (still) effective in combining competitiveness, sustainable development, employment, and social cohesion. (c) Juho Saari 2009

  7. 6. REINVENTING THE WHEEL II - Agenda setting for social development • POLICY COORDINATION: Flexicurity - labour relations, active labour market, life-long learning, social policy • LONG TERM-THINKING: Life cycle approach revisited - distribution over a life cycle with a stronger redistibution towards families with children. • UNCERTAINTY - families, labour markets, housing, and indebtedness. • PROPERTY RIGHTS : Asset based social policies - New sources of resources to households. • SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING: Focus on relative differences and competition. (c) Juho Saari 2009

  8. 7. REINVENTING THE WHEEL III - Framing new policies • It matters how people and organisations interpret new policies. • How policies are frames is crucial for positive feedback and trust. • Common policies need coherent messages from the ministries of social affairs to the ministries of finance, and in-between the regional and global institutions. • Strong connections to sustainable development policies. (c) Juho Saari 2009

  9. As an example, how to promote subjective well-being • More positive expectations to limit the impact of adaptive preferences. • Smaller social differences to limit the rat race. • More legitimacy of social policy institutions to allow flexibility. • More trust towards the government to make reform-making possible. • More voluntary work to support social connections. (c) Juho Saari 2009

  10. THANK YOU (c) Juho Saari 2009

More Related