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Trajectories of Reforming European Welfare State Policies under the Post-2008 Socio-Economic Governance Regime

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Abstract

Since the onset of the global financial crisis a decade ago, social policy reforms have become increasingly prominent in EU governance and policy debate. The severe decline in annual growth rates of social expenditures in EU-28 indicates a clear retrenchment bias in implementing respective reforms after 2008. Whereas the increasing salience of the seemingly necessity of austerity policies and structural reforms is widely acknowledged, the causes and consequences of these developments remain fiercely contested. While some see the EU as a catalyzer of the debasing of national welfare states, mainly driven by the imperative of fiscal discipline, others stress the broad scope of action left to national decision makers. Many member states have undertaken more or less far-reaching social and employment policy reforms, which they have often sought to justify by reference to EU requirements and recommendations. The article seeks to identify and to discuss specific trajectories and causalities explaining the retrenchment and deregulation bias, which goes along with the post-crisis architecture of fiscal and macroeconomic policy coordination, including Economic Adjustment Programs and Memoranda of Understandings (MoUs) imposed on fiscally distressed countries. Therefore, an econometric analysis provides an examination of the impact of financial assistance programs (ESM/EFSF) and/or of the Excessive Deficit Procedure (EDP) on countries’ social expenditure rates for the period 2008 to 2013. In addition, the correlation between the ideological base of parties in government and the social expenditure ratios is tested.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    See for instance Esping-Andersen 2002, Hemerijck 2014 and Leoni 2015a, b.

  2. 2.

    See also the Schröder-Blair-Plan 1998 by Gerhard Schröder and Tony Blair: http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/bueros/suedafrika/02828.pdf. Accessed 12.07.2018.

  3. 3.

    Caroline de la Porte and Elke Heins (2016) even call it an Anglo-German blue print providing the basis for the transformation of European social policies.

  4. 4.

    See Bruff 2014 (’Authoritarian Neoliberalism’); Oberndorfer 2016 (’Authoritarian Competitive Statism’); Gill and Cutler 2014 (’Disciplining Constitutionalism)’; Bieling and Steinhilber 2013; Jackson and Deeg 2012.

  5. 5.

    The respective member states’ policy preferences have to be seen, first and foremost, in the light of their distinct policy legacies. See Schmidt 2002 (varieties of capitalism); Esping-Anderson 1990 (welfare state models); Falkner and Treib 2007 (worlds of compliance).

  6. 6.

    Governments are seen as strong in presidential systems, unified governments with a large majority of the party in office, and when they face few constraints in the decision-making procedure.

  7. 7.

    Signatories are all member states of the European Union, except for the Czech Republic and the UK.

  8. 8.

    Characterised in the literature as a hardening of soft power (cf. Atanosova 2018, p. 32 f.).

  9. 9.

    Signatories are all member states of the European Union except Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Sweden and UK.

  10. 10.

    In 2018, Croatia, Cyprus and Italy are experiencing excessive economic imbalances; France, Spain, Bulgaria, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, Portugal and Sweden are experiencing economic imbalances; Slovenia is found not to be experiencing economic imbalances.

  11. 11.

    The following R-packages were used for the econometric analysis: R-packages: plm (Version 1.6-6, Croissant et al. 2017), lmtest (Version 0.9-36, Hothorn et al. 2018), tsseries (0.10-44, Traplett et al. 2018), stargazer (Version 5.2.1, Hlavac 2018), gplots (3.0.1, Warnes et al. 2016).

  12. 12.

    Detailed results are available upon request.

  13. 13.

    Detailed results are available upon request.

  14. 14.

    Okun’s law refers to the inverse relationship between the unemployment rate and economic growth.

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Correspondence to Bernhard Zeilinger .

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Zeilinger, B., Reiner, C. (2020). Trajectories of Reforming European Welfare State Policies under the Post-2008 Socio-Economic Governance Regime. In: Wöhl, S., Springler, E., Pachel, M., Zeilinger, B. (eds) The State of the European Union. Staat – Souveränität – Nation. Springer VS, Wiesbaden. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-25419-3_10

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