Rich Democracies
Political Economy, Public Policy, and Performance
Harold L. Wilensky
Preface and Acknowledgments
PART I: PATHS OF DEVELOPMENT OF RICH DEMOCRACIES
CHAPTER 1: Convergence Theory
Family Structure and Political Demands
The Push for Equality Among Minorities
The Rise of Mass Higher Education
The Rise of the Media of Mass Communication and Entertainment
The Increasing Number and Perhaps Influence of Experts and Intellectuals
Social Stratification and Mobility
Hours, Schedules, and the Organization of Work
The Welfare State
Is There Any Convergence in the Polity?
A Postscript on Economic Development and Income Inequality
Conclusion
CHAPTER 2: Types of Political Economy
Democratic Corporatism
Corporatism-Without-Labor
Fragmented and Decentralized Political Economies
Democratic Corporatism and Policy Linkages
Erosion, Transformation, or Persistence of Corporatism?
Sweden and the Netherlands as Cases of Most Change
Structural and Ideological Sources of Democratic Corporatism
Why No Corporatism in Ireland?
Conclusion
CHAPTER 3: Mass Society, Participation, and the Mass Media
Participation in the U.S.: Amount, Trends, and Effects
Cross-National Evidence on Participation
The Rising Influence of the Media of Mass Communication and Entertainment
Explaining Media Content and Style
Summary and Conclusion
CHAPTER 4: Theories of the Post-Industrial Society
Occupational and Industrial Trends
Postindustrial Values?
Interlocking Cycles of Family, Work, and Social-Political Participation: A Comment on Age Cohort, Political Generation, and Life Cycle
Conclusion: Let's Drop "Postindustrial Society" from Our Vocabulary
PART II: THE WELFARE STATE AND SOCIAL POLICY: CONVERGENCE OR DIVERGENCE?
CHAPTER 5: The Welfare State: Convergence and Divergence
Determinants of Welfare-State Development
Ideology, Political System, and the Welfare State: the Case of Pensions
A Crisis of the Welfare State?
Retrenchment of the Welfare State?
Continuity at the Core: the Cases of Britain and Germany
Leftism, Catholicism, and Democratic Corporatism: Explaining National Differences in Social Spending
Convergence Theory: Economic Level, Population Aging, Mobility-Meritocracy, and Minority-Group Cleavages
CHAPTER 6: Sector Spending and Program Emphasis
Spending Packages
Sources of Variation in Sector Spending Patterns
Personal Social Services vs. Cash Transfers?
The Big Tradeoff: Pensions and Family Allowances vs. Public Assistance, Higher Education, and the Military
CHAPTER 7: Types of Political Economy, Party Ideology, and Family Policy: Contrasting Government Responses to a Common Problem
Policies and Politics: Big Differences and Maybe a Little Convergence
Methods and Findings
Family Allowance and Family Policy Index
Summary and Conclusion
CHAPTER 8: The American Welfare Mess in Comparative Perspective
American "Welfare" Programs
Myths and Facts about the American Welfare System
Does Workfare Work?
Means Testing, Stigma, and Takeup Rates: A Few Comparisons
Technical Problems, Error Rates, and the Welfare Mess
Explaining National Differences in Reliance on Means Tests
Types of Political Economy, Teenage Pregnancy, and Abortion
Summary and Conclusion
CHAPTER 9: Bureaucratic Efficiency and Bloat
Economies of Scale
Explaining Convergence and Divergence in the Size of Bureaucracies
Insights from the Cases of the United States, Canada, and Italy
PART III: SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
CHAPTER 10: Tax-Welfare Backlash: How to Tax, Spend, and Yet Keep Cool
Concepts and Measures of Backlash
Why Public Opinion Cannot Explain Backlash Successes
Nativism and Tax-Welfare Backlash Go Together
A Revolt of the Middle Mass?
Theory and Hypotheses: What Causes Backlash?
Summary and Interpretation
CHAPTER 11: Are Political Parties Declining?
The United States: Is It the Textbook Case of Dealignment?
Types of Political Economy and Party Decline: Cross-National Evidence
Voter Turnout, Election Frequency, Direct Democracy, and Voter Fatigue
New Zealand 1984-93: A Cautionary Tale of Party Dealignment
Summary and Conclusion
CHAPTER 12: Types of Political Economy, Spending, Taxing, and Economic Performance
Introduction
The Welfare State and Economic Performance: Lessons from the Past
Social Spending and Economic Performance 1950-74
Corporatism and Economic Performance 1950-74
The Interaction of Types of Corporatism, Social Spending, and Economic Performance, 1950-74
Post-Shock Economic Performance 1974-79 and 1980-84
Social Spending and Economic Performance 1974-79 and 1980-84
The Interaction of Types of Corporatism, Spending, Energy Dependence, and Economic Performance 1974-79 and 1980-91
What Happened in the 1990s?
Japan vs. the United States: Trading Places?
Explaining National Differences in Economic Performance
Measures of Tradeoffs Typical of Democratic Corporatism
The Causes of Economic Performance: Findings from Multivariate Analysis
CHAPTER 13: The Great American Job Machine in Comparative Perspective
Demographic Forces
Social Structural Forces
Multiple Regression Results and the Question of Causation
A Desirable Political Economy
CHAPTER 14: Risk and Safety: American Mayhem in Comparative Perspective
Trends in Violent Crime
Why Violent Crime in the United States, Especially Murder?
A Comparative Analysis of Mayhem
Bringing the Two Theories Together: Industrialization vs. Types of Political Economy
CHAPTER 15: Types of Political Economy, Regulatory Regimes, and the Environment
Air Pollution
Occupational Health and Safety
Disability and Sickness As Slippery and Expansive Categories: Is There a Tendency Toward Excess?
Nuclear Energy Development and Safety
The Regulation of Tobacco Use
Summary
CHAPTER 16: Health Performance: Affluence, Political Economy, and Public Policy as Sources of Real Health
Affluence vs. Medical Care
The Organization and Delivery of Medical Care
Administrative Costs, Waste, and Corruption
Affluence, Spending, Types of Political Economy, and Health Performance: An Empirical Test
Mass Society, Poverty, Inequality, Insecurity, and Health Performance
Summary and Conclusion
CHAPTER 17: Globalization: Does It Subvert Labor Standards, the Welfare State, and Job Security?
The Nation-State Is Alive And Well
Convergence Downward, Upward, Or Just Persistent Differences?
Deregulation of the Labor Market?
Convergence in Immigration, Differences in Policy and Politics
The Role of Multinational Corporations
The Globalization of Finance: Are Strong Central Banks a Drag?
Summary And Interpretation
CHAPTER 18: American Exceptionalism and Policy Implications
How Different is the United States?
Policy and Politics
Conclusion
APPENDICES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX








