Rich Democracies
Political Economy, Public Policy, and Performance
Harold L. Wilensky
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Figures |
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1.1 |
Impact of Continuing Industrialization on Family Structure |
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1.2 |
United States Civilian Labor Force, 1910-1998 |
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1.3 |
Social Classes and Household Income Before Taxes, 1996 |
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2.1 |
Model Explaining Performance Among 19 Rich Democracies, Including Economic Performance |
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2.2 |
21 Types of Programs Labeled "Active Labor Market Policy" |
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4.1 |
Morale and Participation Curve |
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5.1 |
Pension Policy Trajectories: Convergence Toward a Dual System of Income Security for the Aged Among 18 Countries |
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5.2 |
Typical Stages in Pension Development: A Natural History of Convergence Toward Combinations of Meritocratic and Egalitarian-Humanitarian Principles |
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5.3 |
Combining the Industrialization Model With the Political Economy Model: Leftism and Catholicism Foster Corporatism Thereby Increasing Social Spending; Affluence Increases Population Aging Thereby Increasing Social Spending |
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6.1 |
Structural Determinants of Sector Spending as Both Effort (Public Spending/GNP) and Output (Per Capita Spending) |
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7.1 |
Left Power Encourages Both Corporatism and Women at Work and Thereby Expands Family Policy, 1976-82. Catholic Power Keeps Women at Home But Fosters Corporatism, with Mixed Effects on Family Policy. Older Populations Independently Encourage Family Policy |
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9.1 |
Industrialization and Types of Political Economy as Sources of Bureaucratic Bloat |
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10.1 |
The Glistrup Curve: Tax Revenue as Percent of GDP at Market Prices, 1965-1971 |
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10.2 |
Industrialization and Tax-Welfare Backlash: A Causal Model |
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12.1 |
Causal Model for Regression Analysis of the Major Sources of Economic Performance, 19 Rich Democracies |
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14.1 |
Affluence, Minority Group Cleavages, and Mobility and Meritocracy Increase Mayhem, 1988 |
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14.2 |
Corporatism, Family Policy, and Equality Reduce Mayhem; Means-Testing Increases It, 1988 |
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