The Globalization–Welfare State Nexus Reconsidered

Stephanie Meinhard, N. Potrafke
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引用次数: 98

Abstract

Two hypotheses relate to the globalization-welfare state nexus: the efficiency hypothesis predicts that globalization reduces government sector size and governments’ capacity to finance the welfare state. The compensation hypothesis, in contrast, predicts that globalization induces a higher demand for social insurance which results in an extended welfare state. Empirical evidence on the globalization-welfare state nexus is mixed. The evidence is re-examined by investigating a yearly panel dataset of 186 countries for the 1970-2004 period. This paper uses data compiled by the Penn World Tables on government sector size and employs the Konjunkturforschungsstelle (KOF-Swiss Economic Institute) index of globalization. The results show that globalization increased government sectors around the world. Social globalization especially had a positive influence. Globalization-induced effects were stronger in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. Overall globalization and economic globalization reduced the relative price of government expenditures. These findings suggest that globalization does not jeopardize the welfare state at all.
全球化与福利国家关系的再思考
两个假说与全球化与福利国家的关系有关:效率假说预测全球化会减少政府部门的规模和政府为福利国家提供资金的能力。相反,补偿假说预测,全球化导致对社会保险的更高需求,从而导致福利国家的扩大。关于全球化与福利国家关系的经验证据是混杂的。通过对1970年至2004年期间186个国家的年度小组数据集进行调查,这些证据得到了重新检验。本文使用了宾夕法尼亚大学世界政府部门规模表编制的数据,并采用了Konjunkturforschungsstelle (KOF-Swiss Economic Institute)全球化指数。结果表明,全球化增加了世界各地的政府部门。尤其是社会全球化产生了积极的影响。经济合作与发展组织(OECD)成员国受全球化影响更大。总体全球化和经济全球化降低了政府支出的相对价格。这些发现表明,全球化根本不会危及福利国家。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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