Globalization, Democracy, and Effective Welfare Spending in the Developing World
The literature on the effects of globalization on social policy and welfare, and the parallel literature on the effects of democracy, operate in mutual isolation to a surprising degree. This article extends the debate on the welfare state in the developing world by examining the social policy reacti...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Comparative political studies 2005-11, Vol.38 (9), p.1015-1049 |
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description | The literature on the effects of globalization on social policy and welfare, and the parallel literature on the effects of democracy, operate in mutual isolation to a surprising degree. This article extends the debate on the welfare state in the developing world by examining the social policy reactions of democratic and authoritarian governments to globalization. Using unbalanced panel data on 57 developing nations, and considering social security and health and education spending, the authors examine whether democratic and authoritarian regimes exhibit similar or different social spending priorities in the context of increasing economic openness. The results show that social spending in “hard” authoritarian regimes is more sensitive to the pressures of globalization than in democratic or intermediate regimes. |
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subjects | Authoritarianism Comparative Government Comparative politics Democracy Developing Countries Education budget Globalization LDCs Policy making Political Systems Public health Regression analysis Social Policy Social security Statistical analysis Welfare Welfare State |
title | Globalization, Democracy, and Effective Welfare Spending in the Developing World |
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