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" Growing public : "


Document Type : BL
Record Number : 705781
Doc. No : b527970
Main Entry : Lindert, Peter H
Title & Author : Growing public : : social spending and economic growth since the eighteenth century /\ Peter H. Lindert
Publication Statement : Cambridge, UK ;New York :: Cambridge,, 2004
Page. NO : 2 volumes :: illustrations ;; 24 cm
ISBN : 0521529166
: : 0521821746
: : 0521821754
: : 9780521529167
: : 9780521821742
: : 9780521821759
Bibliographies/Indexes : Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents : v. 1. Part 1: Overview -- Patterns and puzzles -- Findings -- Part 2: The rise of social spending -- Poor relief before 1880 -- Interpreting the patterns of early poor relief -- The rise of mass public schooling before 1914 -- Public schooling in the twentieth century : what happened to U.S. leadership? -- Explaining the rise of social transfers since 1880 -- Part 3: Prospects for social transfers -- The public pension crisis -- Social transfers in the second and third worlds -- Part 4: What effects on economic growth? -- Keys to the free-lunch puzzle -- On the well-known demise of the Swedish welfare state -- How the keys were made : democracy and cost control --
: v. 2. Part 5: The underlying framework -- A minimal theory of social transfers -- A guide to the tests -- Part 6: Accounting for the social spending, jobs, and growth -- Explaining the rise of mass public schooling -- Explaining the rise of social transfers, 1880-1930 -- What drove postwar social spending? -- Social transfers hardly affected growth -- Reconciling unemployment and growth in the OECD -- Appendices: A. Time series on school enrollments and teachers, 1830-1930 -- B. Conflicting data on elementary school enrollments within the United Kingdom, 1851-1931 -- C. Public and total educational expenditures as percentages of national product, since 1850 -- D. Regressions predicting schooling, growth, social transfers, and direct taxes, 1880-1930 -- E. Regressions predicting social spending, growth, and employment, OECD 1962-1995 -- F. Social transfers circa 1990 versus history -- G. Postregression accounting formulae
Abstract : Growing Public examines the question of whether social policies that redistribute income impose constraints on economic growth. Taxes and transfers have been debated for centuries, but only now can we get a clear view of the whole evolution of social spending. What kept prospering nations from using taxes for social programs until the end of the nineteenth century? Why did taxes and spending then grow so much, and what are the prospects for social spending in this century? Why did North America become a leader in public education in some ways and not others? Lindert finds answers in the economic history and logic of political voice, population aging, and income growth. Contrary to traditional beliefs, the net national costs of government social programs are virtually zero. This book not only shows that no Darwinian mechanism has punished the welfare states, but uses history to explain why this surprising result makes sense. Contrary to the intuition of many economists and the ideology of many politicians, social spending has contributed to, rather than inhibited, economic growth
Subject : Government spending policy-- History, Case studies
Subject : Income distribution-- History, Case studies
Subject : Transfer payments-- History, Case studies
Subject : Welfare economics-- History, Case studies
Subject : Government spending policy-- History, Case studies
Subject : Income distribution-- History, Case studies
Subject : Transfer payments-- History, Case studies
Subject : Welfare economics-- History, Case studies
Dewey Classification : ‭339.5/22‬
LC Classification : ‭HJ2005‬‭.L565 2004‬
: ‭HD87‬‭.L56 2004‬
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