COVID-19 and welfare state support: the case of universal basic income

IF 5.7 1区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
David Weisstanner
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has revived discussions about universal basic income (UBI) as a potential crisis response. Yet despite favorable circumstances, little actual policy change in this area was observed. This article seeks to explain this absence of policy change and to reflect on the prospects for introducing UBI schemes after the pandemic in European democracies. I argue that public opinion on UBI provides few electoral incentives to push for social policy change. Using prepandemic data from 21 European democracies and pandemic data from the UK, I show that political support for UBI has been divided between different groups who advocate conflicting policy goals and who hold divergent views about existing welfare state arrangements. While support for UBI might have increased during the pandemic, the underlying political dividing lines are likely to have remained intact. Due to these enduring divisions and the stable support for existing social policy arrangements over an untested policy, the prospects for introducing UBI schemes in the post-pandemic world remain uncertain.
COVID-19与福利国家支持:以全民基本收入为例
2019冠状病毒病大流行重新引发了关于全民基本收入作为潜在危机应对措施的讨论。然而,尽管环境有利,但在这一领域几乎没有实际的政策变化。本文试图解释这种缺乏政策变化的现象,并反思欧洲民主国家在大流行后引入全民基本收入计划的前景。我认为,公众对全民基本收入的看法,几乎没有为推动社会政策变革提供选举激励。利用来自21个欧洲民主国家的流行病前数据和来自英国的流行病数据,我表明,对UBI的政治支持在不同群体之间存在分歧,这些群体主张相互冲突的政策目标,并对现有的福利国家安排持有不同的看法。虽然在大流行期间对全民基本收入的支持可能有所增加,但潜在的政治分界线可能保持不变。由于这些长期存在的分歧和对现有社会政策安排的稳定支持,而不是未经检验的政策,在大流行后的世界引入全民基本收入计划的前景仍然不确定。
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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来源期刊
Policy and Society
Policy and Society Multiple-
CiteScore
18.00
自引率
6.50%
发文量
43
审稿时长
30 weeks
期刊介绍: Policy and Society is a prominent international open-access journal publishing peer-reviewed research on critical issues in policy theory and practice across local, national, and international levels. The journal seeks to comprehend the origin, functioning, and implications of policies within broader political, social, and economic contexts. It publishes themed issues regularly and, starting in 2023, will also feature non-themed individual submissions.
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