
Recent economic reforms in Great Britain have made changes both in the structure of benefits paid to the poor of working age and in the state pension scheme. Together they constitute the most substantial single set of reforms to the system since the post-war Beveridge proposals which laid the foundations of the modern welfare state in Britain. This volume brings together leading economic authorities to comment on the development, nature and impact of the reforms that have been implemented, to examine some of the underlying conceptual problems of social security provision, and to discuss the economic effects of such provisions. Their contributions cover all areas of this complex field and include comparative evidence from outside the UK.
This volume investigates the economic implications and structural efficacy of the significant welfare and pension reforms implemented in Great Britain. Andrew Dilnot, a prominent economist specializing in public policy, curates a collection of expert analyses that evaluate the transition from post-war Beveridge-era foundations to contemporary social security frameworks. The text provides a rigorous examination of the conceptual challenges inherent in state-provided benefits and the broader macroeconomic consequences of these policy shifts.
What You Will Find
Experts identify this work as a critical resource for understanding the evolution of British social policy during a period of significant legislative change. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational text for students and practitioners of public economics.
Page Count:
287
Publication Date:
1989-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198286988
ISBN-13:
9780198286981
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