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This book examines key issues connected with the distribution of
personal wealth in the UK. It examines why wealth is now such an
important factor in social differences and public policy. It
presents the most recent information on current wealth inequalities
and a detailed discussion of trends in the distribution of wealth.
It uses newly available data to compare wealth inequalities in the
UK with the USA, Canada and Sweden. It uses longitudinal data,
which track the same people over time, to examine trajectories in
wealth accumulation over the decade to 2005 and inequalities in
inheritances over the same period. It looks at how parental wealth
levels and people's asset-holdings early in adulthood affect
outcomes later in their lives. The final part looks at the way in
which policies towards wealth-holding developed historically, and
the contradictory ways in which a wide range of public policies
relate to people's wealth levels, including through taxation,
means-testing, and the encouragement of saving, and discusses what
the key issues for policy towards wealth and wealth inequalities
now are. Personal wealth in the UK totalled GBP5.5 trillion by 2010
(GBP9-10 trillion if occupational pension rights are included).
Inheritance flows are now equivalent to 4 per cent of national
income each year. All households in the wealthiest tenth have more
than 75 times the wealth of any of those in the bottom tenth.
Absolute differences in wealth levels have increased substantially
over the last 15 years, so wealth differences represent many more
years of income than in the past. This makes them of great
importance to life chances. This makes the book highly relevant for
public policy, but also for academic and student understanding of a
crucial dimension of social difference. As well as bringing
together existing information on the area, the book contains
considerable new analysis on wealth inequality, inheritance and
their impacts, drawing on work which is at the forefront of recent
research.
The challenge of meeting the growing cost of welfare is one of the
most pressing issues facing governments of our time. Glennerster's
authoritative Understanding the cost of welfare assesses what
welfare costs and how it is funded sector-by-sector. The book is
written in a clear, accessible style, ideally suited to both
teaching and study, and the general reader. This substantially
revised third edition includes: * Discussion of the many funding
issues now facing welfare states, such as demographic change, tax
resistance, slow growth and austerity programmes * The theory and
practice of devolved tax and budgetary responsibilities between UK
nations and in comparison with other countries * New chapters on
pensions and post-16 education * More regular and extensive
comparative analysis Divided into 3 sections, covering Principles,
Service funding, and The Future, the book Includes questions for
discussion and suggestions for further reading, making it an
easy-to-use, essential resource for both undergraduate and
post-graduate students of Social Policy, Sociology, Politics and
Public Administration.
This is a third edition of a successful textbook that provides a
contemporary account of how social services in the UK are paid for.
The new edition brings the textbook up-to-date with its fast-moving
subject area, explaining the finance of human services - health
care, education, housing, social security a nd social care-through
a review of the economic literature. It also gives an account of
how the cash to pay for the services actually reaches schools,
hospitals and social service departments, right from the start of
the process, examining how government raises taxes, through to
allocation of the funds. Both comprehensive and expertly written,
this textbook will continue to feature as key reading for a variety
of Social and Policy related courses.
This is a third edition of a successful textbook that provides a
contemporary account of how social services in the UK are paid for.
The new edition brings the textbook up-to-date with its fast-moving
subject area, explaining the finance of human services - health
care, education, housing, social security a nd social care-through
a review of the economic literature. It also gives an account of
how the cash to pay for the services actually reaches schools,
hospitals and social service departments, right from the start of
the process, examining how government raises taxes, through to
allocation of the funds. Both comprehensive and expertly written,
this textbook will continue to feature as key reading for a variety
of Social and Policy related courses.
England is unusual in relying so heavily on central government to
finance its social services. Citizens expect to be able to access
services of similar standards wherever they live. This raises
difficult theoretical and practical issues. How are the needs of
different areas to be measured? How are the different costs of
providing services in very different parts of the country to be
assessed? This book reviews the economic theory that underpins
thinking about the problem. It then traces the way governments have
distributed resources from the end of the last century until today.
It critically analyzes current methods for three services - the
National Health Service, schools, and housing. This book is
intended for scholars and students of political science, British
politics, public policy and administration, public management,
development management, and policy-makers and analysts interested
in government and public service spending.
Richard Titmuss was Professor of Social Administration at the
London School of Economics from 1950 until his death in 1973. His
publications on welfare and social policy were radical and
wide-ranging, spanning fields such as demography, class
inequalities in health, social work, and altruism. Titmuss's work
played a critical role in establishing the study of social policy
as a scientific discipline; it helped to shape the development of
the British Welfare State and influenced thinking about social
policy worldwide.Despite its continuing relevance to current social
policy issues both in the UK and internationally, much of Titmuss's
work is now out of print. This new book brings together a selection
of his most important writings on a range of key social policy
issues, together with commentary on these from contemporary experts
in the field. The book should be read by undergraduate and
postgraduate students in social policy and sociology, for many of
whom Titmuss remains compulsory reading. It will be of interest to
academics and other policy analysts as well as students and
academics in political science and social work.
A careful and precise presentation, from leading experts in the
field, of the development of the welfare state in the UK. Looking
at both historical processes and the welfare systems current state,
these excellent contributors provide an authoritative analysis,
packed with data. The United Kingdom had one of the oldest and most
extensive welfare states in the world. The economic crisis of 1976
and eighteen years of Conservative Government have tested the
welfare system to its very foundations. Much changed, yet much
remained the same after two decades. Did the Conservative
Government dismember the welfare state or reform it? Did the
changes of the past twenty years make any difference and to whom?
This second edition of the widely-acclaimed State of Welfare
reviews the changing fate of social policy in the years since 1974.
It details changes in policy but also charts trends in spending in
real terms over the period and analyses the outcomes of spending on
education, the National Health Service, the personal social
services, housing and social security. There is no other consistent
published time series of spending on these services over this
period in real and volume terms. The General Household Survey is
re-analysed to produce a common source of information on the way
changes in these services have affected families. Other available
sources of information on the impact of past government reforms are
drawn upon to provide a comprehensive account. This completely
revised edition uses the successful framework adopted in the first
volume to bring the story up to the end of the Conservative
Administration with the latest available expenditure figures. This
adds nearly a decade to the account detailed in the first edition -
a decade of remarkable change. The book is clearly structured, with
core chapters covering each of the five service areas of education,
health, housing, personal social services and social security, and
a concluding chapter summarising the key findings of previous
chapters to provide an overview of the current state of welfare.
Each chapter is then subdivided, with sections on the ultimate aims
of welfare policy in the particular area covered, public
expenditure, the outputs for that spending, and the outcomes in
terms of indicators of individual welfare. Each chapter is
summarised in an in brief section at the end, and has a further
reading list. Illustrated with approximately 150 figures and
tables, the book presents a substantial amount of quantitative
information (much of which comes from Local and Central Government
sources) in accessible formats. The book contains a substantial
bibliography, including many government papers as well as published
books and journal articles. The book can therefore be used as a
bibliographical database, besides functioning as a textbook. The
State of Welfare functions as an ideal text for public economics
students, or those studying social or public policy.
The challenge of meeting the growing cost of welfare is one of the
most pressing issues facing governments of our time. Glennerster's
authoritative Understanding the cost of welfare assesses what
welfare costs and how it is funded sector-by-sector. The book is
written in a clear, accessible style, ideally suited to both
teaching and study, and the general reader. This substantially
revised third edition includes: * Discussion of the many funding
issues now facing welfare states, such as demographic change, tax
resistance, slow growth and austerity programmes * The theory and
practice of devolved tax and budgetary responsibilities between UK
nations and in comparison with other countries * New chapters on
pensions and post-16 education * More regular and extensive
comparative analysis Divided into 3 sections, covering Principles,
Service funding, and The Future, the book Includes questions for
discussion and suggestions for further reading, making it an
easy-to-use, essential resource for both undergraduate and
post-graduate students of Social Policy, Sociology, Politics and
Public Administration.
This book examines key issues connected with the distribution of
personal wealth in the UK. It studies why wealth is now such an
important factor in social differences and public policy. It
presents the most recent information on current wealth inequalities
and a detailed discussion of trends in the distribution of wealth.
It uses newly available data to compare wealth inequalities in the
UK with the USA, Canada, and Sweden. It uses longitudinal data,
which track the same people over time, to examine trajectories in
wealth accumulation over the decade to 2005 and inequalities in
inheritances over the same period. It looks at how parental wealth
levels and people's asset-holdings early in adulthood affect
outcomes later in their lives. The final part looks at the way in
which policies towards wealth-holding developed historically, and
the contradictory ways in which a wide range of public policies
relate to people's wealth levels, including through taxation,
means-testing, and the encouragement of saving, and discusses what
the key issues for policy towards wealth and wealth inequalities
now are. Personal wealth in the UK totalled GBP5.5 trillion by 2010
(GBP9-10 trillion if occupational pension rights are included).
Inheritance flows are now equivalent to 4 per cent of national
income each year. All households in the wealthiest tenth have more
than 75 times the wealth of any of those in the bottom tenth.
Absolute differences in wealth levels have increased substantially
over the last 15 years, so wealth differences represent many more
years of income than in the past. This makes them of great
importance to life chances. This makes the book highly relevant for
public policy, but also for academic and student understanding of a
crucial dimension of social difference. As well as bringing
together existing information on the area, the book contains
considerable new analysis on wealth inequality, inheritance, and
their impacts, drawing on work which is at the forefront of recent
research.
The Beveridge Report of 1942 captured the public imagination with
its principle of universal social insurance in Britain; it became,
and remained a benchmark for social security planning and its
influence has been international. Beveridge's idea was to use
universal benefits to remove the poverty caused by certain
contingencies, such as unemployment, or retirement. This book
considers the influence of Beveridge's ideas on social security,
and argues that the reality, over the subsequent fifty years, has
been very different from the principles and from the vision he
expressed. The first part of this volume outlines the context
within which the wartime report was written, the concessions that
were made before implementation was possible, and the history of
the postwar social insurance system. The important aspects of the
social insurance system are considered in depth, such as the state
pension, and the principle of flat- rather than means-tested
benefits. The second part deals with the diverse responses to
Beveridge's recommendations in several countries: Germany, Poland,
Holland, Israel, Sweden, and Australia. Despite a move away from
universally available benefits to means-tested income support, the
editors argue that Beveridge's important legacy has been the notion
of a national minimum income: a safety net covering all, and they
assess the continuing relevance of Beveridge's thinking for the
future of social security.
This study is in response to a growth of public interest in the
size and structure of education facilities and their relation to
economic and social policy. It determines the scope of educational
services, both public and private, and traces the sources of
educational finance through the various spending agencies and
allocators of finance back to the eventual suppliers of funds. With
detailed analysis based on careful observation, the study provides
a wealth of statistical information on this neglected aspect of
education.
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