- This project has passed.
Designing a Pro-Market Social Protection System: A Literature Review
YSI South Asia Webinar on Capitalism
Start time:
November 18, 2021 @ 1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
EST
Location:
Online
Type:
Other
Speakers
Einar Øverbye
Professor
Description
This session of the webinar series will feature Prof. Dr. Einar Øverbye, whose talk will center around his chapter in the Oxford Handbook of the Welfare State, titled Disciplinary Perspectives.
Abstract
A worry that public welfare may serve as a disincentive to thrift is older than the welfare state. Whether or not this worry is well founded, how large eventual negative efficiency effects may be, or whether negative effects are offset by even larger (and usually more subtle) positive efficiency effects, is the core theme in the economic debate on welfare states. The basic underlying question is about economic efficiency, be it on a micro or macro level.
The disincentive argument is simple and straightforward: if people get paid for doing nothing, it may reduce their motive to do something. The counterarguments are usually more subtle. For example, the notion that unemployment insurance acts as a Keynesian automatic stabilizer, since expenditures go up (and stimulate demand) in hard times and decrease (and make public spending contract) in good times. Another counter-argument holds that unemployment benefits allow the unemployed to search longer for optimal work, securing a better fit between the buyers and sellers of labour.
These are two of a series of arguments about possible positive efficiency effects of welfare states. A rule-based welfare state – by dampening social conflicts and fostering predictability – can also create a more stable environment for investors. This may attract long-term capital satisfied with modest but safe returns, rather than “buccaneer capitalists” hoping for a quick- win-and-then-out-again profit. Some also see a welfare state as a strategy to get interest groups to accept open markets, by offering them social protection if they should end up as losers (Katzenstein, Garrett, Rodrik). Within this line of thought, a rule-based welfare state can be conceptualized as a credible commitment device through which anticipated winners of economic globalization dampen resistance among anticipated losers, and hence maintain an international competitive pressure on domestic producers to stay efficient (Moene).
Further arguments to explore concerns positive externalities related to investments in human capital and health (Becker); the ability of mandatory protection systems to overcome market failures in insurance markets (Hayek, Barr); avoid free-rider problems (Friedman); and having fewer disincentive effects than the de facto counterfactual alternatives – which tend to be occupational welfare plus informal systems, rather than market-based individual insurance schemes.
However, with regard to all of the above, the devil is in the design. Getting the incentive structure right within mandatory systems is a challenge. Clientilistic-type welfare states that can change abruptly due to the ideological or idiosyncratic whims of a ruler are unlikely to foster good incentives, predictability and economic growth (Banerjee & Duflo, Acemoglu). It is possible to design mandatory welfare systems that are superior to private alternatives, but it is also possible to design mandatory welfare systems that are more dysfunctional than private alternatives.
Speaker Bio
Einar Øverbye is Professor in International Social Welfare and Health Policy at Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway. He has worked in the field of social and health policies since 1986.
Some relevant publications include: Disciplinary perspectives on welfare states (Oxford Handbook on the Welfare State, forthcoming); Dilemmas when implementing conditional cash transfers: Lessons for Ghana and the rest of us (with Jones Danquah, forthcoming in International Social Security Review 2022); The Evolution of Social Welfare Systems in Europe 1883-2013: From limited to broad coverage, and from fragmented to integrated systems, in An Analysis for An Equitable and Sustainable Welfare System [in China], Bejiing: Development Research Center of the State Council of the People's Republic of China 2015, ISBN 978-7-5001-4185-3; Extending social security in developing countries: A review of three main strategies. International Journal of Social Welfare 2005 (4) p. 305-314.
Format
Prof. Einar Øverbye will be speaking for the first 45 minutes. We will then be holding a Q&A Session.
This session is part of the larger project:
Dissecting Capitalism: Its past, present and future
This series aims to explore the tenets of capitalism over the fabric of time and examine its influence on the global economy and social classes.
Hosted by Working Group(s):
Organizers
Attendees
Mohammed Wakif Amin Hussain
mayumi tabata
Eva Lickert
Behzod Alimov
Joaquín Alvarez
Krshtee Sukhbilas
Eric Haiman
Xinwen Zhang
Nan Hao
Hazem Mohamed
Fabio Bayro Kaiser
Aneesha Chitgupi
Christiane Hitzemann
Komal Shakeel
Federico Bachmann
Subhasree Ghatak
Jeff Crouch
Kunal Munjal
Farwa Naqvi
Nepeti Nicanor
Muskaan Babbar
Marida Borrello
Marida Borrello
Celso Gonzalez
Arun Balachandran
Sattwick Dey Biswas
Hudda Luni
Maeva Bennetto
akash bhatt
Ajibola Akanji
Alisa Illarionova
Muez Ali
Ebele Nwokoye
Alexander Cruz
Shyam Soundararajan
farhad gohardani
Rocio Lozano
Renuka Bhat
Jessica Li
sheena jain
Christopher Pomwene Shafuda
Marc Jacquinet
Borys Cieslak
Samyak Jain
Srishti Goyal