World Politics
Volume 48, Number 2, January 1996
E-ISSN: 1086-3338 Print ISSN: 0043-8871
DOI: 10.1353/wp.1996.0004
E-ISSN: 1086-3338 Print ISSN: 0043-8871
DOI: 10.1353/wp.1996.0004
Pierson, Paul.
The New Politics of the Welfare State
World Politics - Volume 48, Number 2, January 1996, pp. 143-179
The Johns Hopkins University Press
Paul Pierson - The New Politics of the Welfare State - World Politics 48:2 World Politics 48.2 (1996) 143-179 The New Politics of the Welfare State Paul Pierson * Tables The much-discussed crisis of the welfare state is now two decades old. The tremendous twentieth-century expansion of social programs has been a remarkable feature of advanced industrial societies. In all these countries the welfare state is a core institution, accounting for between one-fifth and one-third of GNP. Ever since the postwar economic boom ended in the early 1970s, however, social programs have faced mounting political challenges. Questions of expansion have long since given way to an acknowledgment of the limits to welfare state growth and the prospect for extended austerity. Despite this fundamental change, however, we still know stunningly little about the politics of social policy retrenchment. In contrast to our vast knowledge of the dynamics of welfare state expansion -- arguably the most well-tilled subfield of comparative public policy -- welfare state retrenchment remains largely uncharted terrain. Theoretically informed discussion has been limited to very abstract commentaries or the rather reflexive, often implicit application of propositions derived from the study of social policy expansion. This puzzling state of affairs results in part from the very success of earlier scholarship. The quality of historical research on the welfare state has encouraged a simple...