The paternalist politics of punitive and enabling workfare: Evidence from a new dataset on workfare reforms in 16 countries, 1980-2015

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Abstract

Does neoliberalism lie behind the increased use of social policy to control and incentivize labour market behaviour? We argue that this assumed connection is theoretically weak and empirically inaccurate, and we point to an alternative explanation centred on government paternalism. Using a new comparative dataset on workfare reforms, we first describe how the overall balance of punitive and enabling demands placed on the unemployed has changed across 16 countries between 1980 and 2015. We observe a growing number of workfare reforms, modestly tilted towards the punitive side-but without a broad shift towards punitive workfare. We then assess the drivers of policy intervention, finding that government paternalism, rather than neoliberalism, helps us to understand which governments enact enabling and punitive measures. In line with our broader argument, we suggest that this reflects the moral (rather than economic) foundations of social policy.

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Horn, A., Kevins, A., & Van Kersbergen, K. (2023). The paternalist politics of punitive and enabling workfare: Evidence from a new dataset on workfare reforms in 16 countries, 1980-2015. Socio-Economic Review, 21(4), 2137–2166. https://doi.org/10.1093/ser/mwac060

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