Peter Taylor-Gooby’s new book, The Double Crisis of the Welfare State and What We Can Do about It, deals with the welfare state debate.
The NHS, education, social care, local government, employment services, social housing and benefits for the poor all face major challenges from a government determined to entrench a radical and divisive liberalism permanently in British public life.
This book analyses the immediate challenge from headlong cuts that bear most heavily on women, families and the poor, and from a root-and-branch restructuring which will fragment and privatise the bulk of public services. It sets this in the context of escalating inequalities and the longer-term pressures from population ageing.
Professor Taylor-Gooby demonstrates that a more humane and generous welfare state focused on building inclusiveness is possible by combining policies that limit child poverty, promote more equal outcomes from health care and education, introduce a greater contributory element into social benefits, invest in better child and elder care and address low wages and workplace rights. It analyses the political forces that can be marshalled to support these shifts and shows that, despite declining public sympathy for the poor, the welfare state can attract mass support, given appropriate political leadership.
“The Double Crisis of the Welfare State and What We Can Do about It” is published by Palgrave Macmillon.