A Comparative Analysis of Welfare Regimes in the South:
The social origins of social assistance outside of the established democracies
Jeremy Seekings(University of Cape Town)
Presentation at Social Policy Forum, Boğazici University, Istanbul, 3 November 2004
The ‘Crisis’ in Public Welfare Provision: North and South
In the ‘North’ in the late twentieth century:• ‘Almost all advanced industrial democracies cut entitlements in
some programs’• but it was/is politically difficult to roll back substantially the
public provision of welfare
In the ‘South’, at the same time:• Partial or full privatisation of contributory welfare systems
(especially in Latin America and post-Communist Eastern Europe and central Asia)
• but elsewhere: extensions of welfare provision to the poor, especially through non-contributory social assistance schemes (including Brazil and Mexico; South Africa, Namibia, and Botswana; India and Nepal; Hong Kong, Taiwan and Korea)
Esping-Andersen’s Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism (in North)
Liberal Social democratic Conservative
Role of:
Family Marginal Marginal central
Market Central Marginal marginal
State Marginal Central subsidiary
Welfare state:
dominant mode of solidarity Individual Universal kinship;corporatism;
etatism
dominant locus of solidarity Market State family
degree of decommodification Minimal Maximum high (for breadwinner)
degree of defamilialisation medium high low
Extent of redistribution Low High medium
Relevant criticisms of the Esping-Andersen ‘three worlds’ typology?
• It mis-categorises non-modal cases, including most late industrialising countries
• It addresses inadequately gender differences and household/family dynamics
• It underestimates the importance of labour-market policies influencing wages and therefore mis-categorises countries that achieved distributional goals through such policies
• It neglects broader developmental policies, i.e. policies shaping the economic ‘growth path’ (and hence distribution)
• It inadequately addresses the equity-enhancing imperative of ‘commodification’ (through increased employment) prior to ‘decommodification’
Key elements of a ‘distributional regime’
Growth strategy(incl. policies on sectors, skills,
openness)
External context(esp. global demand
for exports)
Distributional outcome
Redistribution through the budget: Welfare,
tax and social policies
Employment- and wage-setting
institutions/policies
Growth path
Distributional vs welfare regimes:
overall effects on equityIn South Africa:• The welfare regime is very redistributive:
– generous social assistance (plus pro-poor educational and health spending),
– financed out of an efficient, progressive tax system
• But the overall distributional regime is neutral, because:– Wage-setting and growth path policies produce a
skill-intensive growth path and very high unemployment, increasing inequality and poverty
• Today, I focus on welfare regimes, with incomplete and uneven attention to other aspects of distributional regimes
• I focus on the question: what are the ‘social origins’ of social assistance?
• I try to answer this question through – Proposing an alternative typology of the
‘Southern’ worlds of welfare capitalism, and
– Examining how and why these different worlds were established in specific historical settings
Role of kin
Both state and market were/are new and weak across much of the South.
Therefore the family/kin was/is:• the provider of default • the major provider, even now for old age:
– only 30% of the world’s elderly are covered by formal arrangements
– only 40% of the world’s working population participate in any formal arrangements for their future old age
• the provider, under the constitution or law, in much of South/East Asia and Africa
Alternatives to kin …
• Rights / claims linked to commodification, i.e. to employment– Whether through the state (social insurance)– Or through ‘market’ (private, but generally state-
regulated, contributory risk-pooling and saving)
• Rights independent of commodification, i.e. ‘decommodification’– Social assistance, i.e. moves towards a basic
income
• Charity
Welfare regimes in the South1. Agrarian: private provision of welfare dependent on access
to land and/or kin (and appropriate state support)• Measured through % of population receiving a subsistence income
from agricultural production
2. Inegalitarian corporatism: risk-pooling and/or savings dependent on employment
• (2a) a more market-oriented version (private, contributory schemes)
• (2b) a more statist version (formal social insurance)• Measured through % of population covered by social insurance or
private contributory schemes, or through benefits or contributions as % of GDP
3. Redistributive: tax-financed provision of welfare independent of employment
• Measured through social assistance payments as % of GDP
Agrarian
Redistrib-utive
Inegalitarian
corporatism
Welfare regimes
in the South
Br
Ken
Kor
Tur
SA
Bang
Typology of southern welfare regimes
Agrarian Inegalitarian corporatist (or
employment-based)
Redistributive
Role of:
Family Central Marginal Marginal
Employment Marginal Central Marginal
State Varied Varied Central
Welfare state:
dominant mode of solidarity
Kinship Individual or corporate (occupational)
universal
dominant locus of solidarity
Family Market or state State
degree of decommodification
Varied Minimum Maximum
degree of defamilialisation low varied Medium to high
Extent of redistribution Varied Low Medium to high
The role of ideas: what norms of welfare provision?
Anglo liberal tradition
(Beverıdge, Marshall)
Corporatist tradition
(ILO)
Rights as citizens (when ‘deservıng’) and/or as workers
Rights as workers
Poverty reduction + risk-pooling + income-smoothing over life-
course
Risk-pooling + income-smoothing over life-course
Universal norms of welfare provision
Employment-based norms of welfare provision
Social assistance + social insurance
Social insurance only
Periodisation of the making of welfare regimes in the South
• Early C20th: Struggles for welfare provision by industrial and public sector workers, typically among unionised immigrants primarily, with the objective of state-subsidised risk-pooling: this generally resulted in corporatist social insurance
– outside of these social groups, poverty was the concern of kin– only in exceptional circumstances did the state accept the need for state-
funded social assistance• Mid-C20th: Concern with agrarian crisis (and urban poverty) in context
of wartime ideals led to reform in two directions: – the predominant response was the ‘developmental’ one, either through re-
establishing an agrarian economy or through ISI, therefore poverty addressed by kin or through the extension of corporatıst risk-pooling / income-smoothing among wage-earners
– less often: the extension of social assistance • Late C20th: broadening of inegalitarian corporatism, i.e. broader
coverage• End of C20th: demographic change, massive deagrarianisation and
democratisation increased pressures for welfare reform including social assistance
(Inegalitarian) Corporatism in the South
Standard story: • state-enforced, contributory social insurance for (1) military
(2) civil servants (3) formal workers in key sectors• Fragmented by occupation; unequal benefits; state
subsidies; limited coverage; costs to employers passed onto consumers
• E.g. Brazil, Chile
A deviant case: South Africa• 1928 non-contributory old-age pensions for white/coloured
elderly (and, later, non-contributory grants for disabled people and single mothers)
• Deagrarianisation; semi-open economy; electoral competition for non-unionised poor, urban voters; an inclusive ideology (but more racism/Afrikaner nationalism not socialism)
The Agrarian Moment
1940s: new concern with poverty across much of the colonial South (as well as the North)
Universal norms of welfare provision: 1938 New Zealand Social Security Act, 1941 Atlantic Charter, 1942 Beveridge Report, 1940/1945 (British) Colonial Development and Welfare Acts, constitutions of new postwar states, etc
Response: revive agrarian society through active state interventions (‘development’) eg land reform, marketing infrastructure, transport infrastructure, financial infrastructure, agricultural extension, social welfare (development) officers
e.g. most of Africa, South Asia, East Asia, South-east Asia
Deviant cases: South Africa, Mauritius, some Caribbean
South Africa
• Non-contributory social assistance for white and coloured people from 1920s
• 1944: extended to African and Indian people (but with racially unequal benefıts)
• Why?– Deagrarianisation– Semi-open economy (gold)– Influence of universal norms during war– Paternalism, not electoral competition
Mauritius
• Small, open economy: sugar estates with landless rural proletariat
• 1937 riots => proposals but prevarication• 1948 competitive elections to Legislative Council
(pre-independence parliament)• 1950: non-contributory old-age pensions
• Meade (1961): ‘In the conditions of Mauritius, low wages (to stimulate expanded employment) plus a moderate dose of social-security benefits ór cost-of-living subsidies (to support the standard of living) together make up a very sensible policy’
South Korea and Taiwan
Agrarian regimes until late introduction of (unsubsidised) social insuranceOpen economiesDemocratisation => social assistance
South Korea:• 1988 (to 1992) opposition parties had majority in legislature• 1988 contributory old-age pension system established; also national health
insurance• 1996 opposition parties again in majority• 1998 non-contributory old-age pensions
Taiwan:• 1993 opposition DPP promised a universal old-age pension; ruling KMT
matched the promise• 1993: means-tested old-age pensions (1994: universal health insurance)• Mid-1990s: other, supplementary social assistance for small farmers and in
some towns
Case Deagrar-ianisation
Universal norms
Open economy
Electoral competition
Entrenched corporatism
Uruguay + + ? +
S/Africa ’27 + (+) (+) +
S/Africa ’44 + + (+) -S/Africa 80s/90s
+ + (+) + (early 1990s)
-
Caribbean + + + +
Mauritius + + + +
Hong Kong + + + + (1990s)
Korea / Taiwan
? ? + +
Brazil 1970s + -Brazil 1990s + ? + -Mexico City + ? + -
Future prospects for social assistance
• Reforms: – Rhetorical support for universal/basic income? E.g. Brazil– Actual support for ‘deserving poor’: elderly, disabled,
children, single parents• Pressures:
– competitive electoral politics– demographic change– Socio-economic change (deagrarianisation, weakened
kinship links)– Fiscal costs of public subsidies of existing social insurance
schemes– More open economies
• Obstacles:– Vetoes by beneficiaries of existing inegalitarian corporatist
regime (trade unions, professional associations, pensioner associations) if subsidised
– Fiscal conservatism