The normalisation of welfare chauvinism

Q4 Social Sciences
Mette Wiggen
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These parties have by most academics been classified as far-right or extreme right and been put in the same party family as the Front National in France or the Freedom Party in Austria. The Scandinavian parties have always resisted that comparison, but, even if they have never been as extreme, they have benefited from support from similar demographics.</p><p>The parties have played important roles in changing welfare policy and access to welfare in the two countries whose welfare regimes have long been characterised by relative generosity with universal systems where everyone benefited at certain phases of life. They grew out of liberal anti-taxation movements and soon gained support from small business owners and liberals. Their core following then translated, a couple of years later, into a broad base of male, working class support. They initially called for privatisation of welfare and for the attachment of conditions to eligibility criteria, based on ideas of deservingness. By the 1990s, they promoted, to varying degrees, dualistic or two-track welfare states, with a focus on excluding immigrants from access to welfare state support, and on stopping immigration all together.</p><p>Many parties in other European countries drew inspiration from their strategies and successes and the terminology ‘welfare chauvinism’ has since been used widely. There are several different uses and interpretations of welfare chauvinism. Here it will be used how it was intended originally by Andersen and Bjørklund, to refer to preferential access to welfare to ‘our own’.</p><p>Immigrants were portrayed through this lens by the far right and the media, they were less deserving of welfare services than citizens or native inhabitants who could prove strong connections to the nation and the land through family and identity. A history of contributing to the state through taxation was an increasingly important criteria to be seen as deserving of welfare services. In several countries, far-right parties were the first to put the need to curb immigration in their programmes in the late 1980s.They wanted to keep the welfare state but advocated reducing immigrants´ access as they turned away from liberalism in the 1990s. The call for a reduction or an end to immigration was mostly based on cost and the idea that immigrants were a ‘drain’ on the welfare state. Mainstream, neoliberal politicians were more careful but most co-opted far right policies on immigration and welfare. The far right were welcomed into several government coalitions and as support parties to minority governments. In Denmark the far right now with the Danish People's Party were supporting minority coalitons 2001–2011 and 2015–2019. In this way they were able to influence legislation with increasingly restrictive criteria and conditionalities linked to accessing welfare benefits. The focus was on deservingness rather than rights and they claimed immigrants should not have any rights in welfare states they had not contributed to. The far-right was also worried about how immigrants impacted negatively on Danish culture. They were against multiculturalism and did not want Denmark to be a country of immigration but stressed that genuine refugees should be welcome. The far right parties were careful not to appear to be racist and warned against immigration by referring to potential problems with mixing of cultures. They wanted, for example, to prevent immigrants with big families from receiving too much child benefit. The far right claimed generous welfare states were a ‘pull factor’ for refugees.</p><p>Support for the welfare state has varied across different welfare regimes. Gösta Esping- Andersen identified distinct welfare regime clusters and stressed the importance of the class character of welfare states in determining levels of public support. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This piece discusses the normalisation of welfare chauvinism. It argues welfare chauvinism was introduced through pressure from the far-right but has since become mainstream in most European countries, including the UK. Welfare chauvinism has had and continues to have a devastating impact on poverty and inequality, human rights, dignity, and the right to life. Denmark is used as a core example because of the long-established dualistic welfare state.

‘Welfare state chauvinism’ is a term that was first coined by Jørgen Goul Andersen and Tor Bjørklund in 1990 in a pioneering article where they discussed the breakthrough of the most successful far-right parties in Europe. The forerunners of the Progress parties in Denmark (and later Danish People´s Party) and Norway were founded in 1972 and 1973 respectively. These parties have by most academics been classified as far-right or extreme right and been put in the same party family as the Front National in France or the Freedom Party in Austria. The Scandinavian parties have always resisted that comparison, but, even if they have never been as extreme, they have benefited from support from similar demographics.

The parties have played important roles in changing welfare policy and access to welfare in the two countries whose welfare regimes have long been characterised by relative generosity with universal systems where everyone benefited at certain phases of life. They grew out of liberal anti-taxation movements and soon gained support from small business owners and liberals. Their core following then translated, a couple of years later, into a broad base of male, working class support. They initially called for privatisation of welfare and for the attachment of conditions to eligibility criteria, based on ideas of deservingness. By the 1990s, they promoted, to varying degrees, dualistic or two-track welfare states, with a focus on excluding immigrants from access to welfare state support, and on stopping immigration all together.

Many parties in other European countries drew inspiration from their strategies and successes and the terminology ‘welfare chauvinism’ has since been used widely. There are several different uses and interpretations of welfare chauvinism. Here it will be used how it was intended originally by Andersen and Bjørklund, to refer to preferential access to welfare to ‘our own’.

Immigrants were portrayed through this lens by the far right and the media, they were less deserving of welfare services than citizens or native inhabitants who could prove strong connections to the nation and the land through family and identity. A history of contributing to the state through taxation was an increasingly important criteria to be seen as deserving of welfare services. In several countries, far-right parties were the first to put the need to curb immigration in their programmes in the late 1980s.They wanted to keep the welfare state but advocated reducing immigrants´ access as they turned away from liberalism in the 1990s. The call for a reduction or an end to immigration was mostly based on cost and the idea that immigrants were a ‘drain’ on the welfare state. Mainstream, neoliberal politicians were more careful but most co-opted far right policies on immigration and welfare. The far right were welcomed into several government coalitions and as support parties to minority governments. In Denmark the far right now with the Danish People's Party were supporting minority coalitons 2001–2011 and 2015–2019. In this way they were able to influence legislation with increasingly restrictive criteria and conditionalities linked to accessing welfare benefits. The focus was on deservingness rather than rights and they claimed immigrants should not have any rights in welfare states they had not contributed to. The far-right was also worried about how immigrants impacted negatively on Danish culture. They were against multiculturalism and did not want Denmark to be a country of immigration but stressed that genuine refugees should be welcome. The far right parties were careful not to appear to be racist and warned against immigration by referring to potential problems with mixing of cultures. They wanted, for example, to prevent immigrants with big families from receiving too much child benefit. The far right claimed generous welfare states were a ‘pull factor’ for refugees.

Support for the welfare state has varied across different welfare regimes. Gösta Esping- Andersen identified distinct welfare regime clusters and stressed the importance of the class character of welfare states in determining levels of public support. Middle class universal welfare states in Scandinavia and corporatist systems like Germany had the highest levels of support. Weaker public support was found in liberal welfare states as in the US, Canada, and the UK.3 While we might expect to see three different types of welfare chauvinism to mirror Esping-Andersen's three types of welfare regimes, a 2013 study that considered welfare support for migrants across several European countries found only two worlds of welfare chauvinism.4 The first was characterised by reluctance of native populations in liberal and conservative welfare states to support entitlements for immigrants, and the second by higher levels of support observed in social democratic regimes.

Denmark has transformed from being the most open and tolerant country in Europe to the most intolerant towards immigrants and immigration. This is due to the impact of the far-right as a support party to minority coalitions 2001–2011 and again the period of 2015–2019. The far-right Danish People´s Party (DPP) has proved very successful in bargaining welfare chauvinism in exchange for support of minority liberal coalitions. Over time, the DPP has lost issue ownership of immigration as other parties have adopted their approach as their own. This has continued under the Social Democrats´ watch from 2019, as they have co-opted DPP welfare chauvinism and won the 2019 elections on a platform of welfare reform, with better pensions at the top of the agenda.

It is worth noting that a large proportion of the public and populist politicians across the spectrum support and promote welfare chauvinism, even while public attitudes towards migrants across Europe are growing more positive. This shows how internalised cost concerns, welfare profiteering, and the marketisation of health and welfare have become among the public, even as optimistic outlooks on immigration and positive experiences of multiculturalism are on the increase.7 Despite these more positive attitude shifts, cross-country studies show that: “under the influence of a welfare chauvinist zeitgeist, the welfare systems are being changed in multiple and complex ways”.8 Political parties do not seem to respond to demands from ‘the people’, but instead impose ideological agendas from the top. Even where there is demand for a certain level of welfare chauvinism combined with positive attitudes to multiculturalism, welfare chauvinism is more likely to come out on top, and more likely to feature prominently in political parties’ demands. This reflects a common prioritisation by politicians and parties who consider balancing budgets more important than safeguarding food security and dignity for all – even in the richest countries in the world.

Human protection of refugees and other immigrants is low on the list of priorities of governments of rich countries, and has been replaced by economic needs. The economic argument and pressure on the welfare state is top of the agenda in immigration policies globally. Securitisation of migration has long been established EU policy, and the far-right is pushing against multiculturalism which is seen as a threat to ´indigenous cultures. Since the last European Parliament elections in 2019, the far-right holds 10 per cent of the MEPs (Members of the European Parliament); this has doubled from 5 per cent in the period of 2014–2019.11 But even the number of MEPs, MPs or local politicians from far-right parties might not matter so much anymore, as the mainstream largely agrees with them on welfare and migration.

However, it is encouraging that trade unions are attracting new members who seek an alternative to the far-right, neoliberal welfare profiteering and welfare chauvinism. Where political parties fail to kick back against welfare chauvinism, there could be an alternative in mobilising opposition through uniting forces between alternative social movements and trade unions.

福利沙文主义的正常化
这篇文章讨论了福利沙文主义的正常化。报告认为,福利沙文主义是在极右翼的压力下引入的,但在包括英国在内的大多数欧洲国家已成为主流。福利沙文主义已经并将继续对贫穷和不平等、人权、尊严和生命权产生破坏性影响。丹麦作为一个核心例子,因为它是一个长期建立的二元福利国家。“福利国家沙文主义”这个词最早是由约翰•格尔•安德森和托尔•比约•rklund于1990年在一篇开创性的文章中提出的,他们在文章中讨论了欧洲最成功的极右翼政党的突破。丹麦(后来是丹麦人民党)和挪威的进步党分别成立于1972年和1973年。这些政党被大多数学者归类为极右翼或极右翼,并与法国的国民阵线或奥地利的自由党属于同一党派。斯堪的纳维亚政党一直抵制这种比较,但是,即使他们从未如此极端,他们也受益于类似人口结构的支持。两党在改变两国的福利政策和获得福利方面发挥了重要作用,这两个国家的福利制度长期以来的特点是相对慷慨,实行普遍制度,每个人都在生命的某些阶段受益。他们起源于自由主义的反税收运动,并很快得到了小企业主和自由主义者的支持。几年后,他们的核心追随者转化为广泛的男性工人阶级支持基础。他们最初呼吁将福利私有化,并在资格标准上附加条件,这是基于应得的观念。到20世纪90年代,他们在不同程度上推动了二元或双轨福利国家,重点是不让移民获得福利国家的支持,并全面阻止移民。其他欧洲国家的许多政党从他们的战略和成功中汲取灵感,“福利沙文主义”一词从此被广泛使用。福利沙文主义有几种不同的用法和解释。在这里,它将按照安徒生和Bjørklund最初的意图使用,指的是优先获得“我们自己的”福利。极右翼和媒体通过这种视角来描绘移民,他们比公民或本土居民更不值得享受福利服务,后者可以通过家庭和身份证明与国家和土地的紧密联系。通过税收为国家做贡献的历史日益成为获得福利服务的重要标准。在一些国家,极右翼政党在20世纪80年代末首先将限制移民的必要性纳入其计划。他们想要保持福利国家,但在20世纪90年代开始远离自由主义时,他们主张减少移民的进入。减少或终止移民的呼吁主要是基于成本和移民是福利国家的“消耗”的想法。主流的新自由主义政治家更加谨慎,但大多数人在移民和福利问题上采纳了极右翼政策。极右翼被欢迎加入几个政府联盟,并成为少数派政府的支持政党。在丹麦,极右翼和丹麦人民党(Danish People’s Party)分别支持2001-2011年和2015-2019年的少数党联合政府。通过这种方式,它们能够影响与获得福利福利有关的标准和条件日益严格的立法。他们的重点是“应得”,而不是“权利”。他们声称,移民不应该在他们没有做出贡献的福利国家享有任何权利。极右翼还担心移民会对丹麦文化产生负面影响。他们反对多元文化主义,不希望丹麦成为一个移民国家,但强调应该欢迎真正的难民。极右翼政党小心翼翼地避免表现出种族主义,并通过提到文化混合的潜在问题来警告移民。例如,他们希望防止大家庭的移民获得过多的儿童福利。极右翼声称,慷慨的福利国家是吸引难民的“拉动因素”。对福利国家的支持在不同的福利制度中有所不同。Gösta Esping- Andersen确定了不同的福利制度集群,并强调福利国家的阶级特征在决定公众支持水平方面的重要性。斯堪的纳维亚半岛的中产阶级普遍福利国家和德国等社团主义制度的支持率最高。在美国、加拿大和英国等自由福利国家,公众支持率较低。 虽然我们可能期望看到三种不同类型的福利沙文主义来反映埃斯平-安德森的三种福利制度,但2013年的一项研究考虑了几个欧洲国家对移民的福利支持,结果发现只有两种福利沙文主义第一个阶段的特点是,自由和保守福利国家的本土人口不愿支持移民的福利;第二个阶段的特点是,社会民主主义国家对移民的支持程度更高。丹麦已经从欧洲最开放、最宽容的国家转变为对移民和移民最不宽容的国家。这是由于极右翼在2001年至2011年以及2015年至2019年期间作为少数派联盟的支持党所产生的影响。事实证明,极右翼的丹麦人民党(DPP)在福利沙文主义谈判中非常成功,以换取少数自由派联盟的支持。从2019年开始,社民党继续推行福利沙文主义,并以福利改革为纲领赢得2019年大选,其中改善养老金是首要议程。值得注意的是,尽管公众对欧洲各地移民的态度越来越积极,但很大一部分公众和民粹主义政治家都支持和促进福利沙文主义。这表明,尽管对移民的乐观看法和对多元文化主义的积极体验正在增加,但公众对成本问题、福利暴利以及健康和福利的市场化的关注是如何内部化的尽管人们的态度发生了这些更为积极的转变,但跨国研究表明:“在福利沙文主义时代精神的影响下,福利制度正在以多种复杂的方式发生变化。政党似乎不回应“人民”的要求,而是从高层强加意识形态议程。即使在需要一定程度的福利沙文主义与对多元文化主义的积极态度相结合的地方,福利沙文主义也更有可能脱颖而出,更有可能在政党的要求中占据突出地位。这反映了政治家和政党的共同优先考虑,他们认为平衡预算比保障所有人的粮食安全和尊严更重要——即使在世界上最富裕的国家也是如此。对难民和其他移民的人身保护在富裕国家政府的优先事项列表中排名较低,并已被经济需求所取代。经济上的争论和对福利国家的压力是全球移民政策的首要议题。移民证券化早已成为欧盟的政策,极右翼正在推动反对多元文化主义,这被视为对本土文化的威胁。自2019年上次欧洲议会选举以来,极右翼占据了欧洲议会议员(MEPs)的10%;但即使是欧洲议会议员、国会议员或极右翼政党的地方政客的数量可能也不再那么重要了,因为主流在福利和移民问题上与他们基本一致。但令人鼓舞的是,工会正在吸引寻求替代极右主义、新自由主义福利暴利和福利沙文主义的新成员。当政党无法反击福利沙文主义时,可以通过联合其他社会运动和工会之间的力量来动员反对派。
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来源期刊
IPPR Progressive Review
IPPR Progressive Review Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: The permafrost of no alternatives has cracked; the horizon of political possibilities is expanding. IPPR Progressive Review is a pluralistic space to debate where next for progressives, examine the opportunities and challenges confronting us and ask the big questions facing our politics: transforming a failed economic model, renewing a frayed social contract, building a new relationship with Europe. Publishing the best writing in economics, politics and culture, IPPR Progressive Review explores how we can best build a more equal, humane and prosperous society.
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