种族多样性和再分配之间是否存在权衡?加拿大的收入援助案例

W. C. Riddell, D. Green
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引用次数: 4

摘要

许多研究得出结论,民族/文化/种族多样性对人际信任和对再分配社会计划的支持有负面影响。尽管加拿大的一些民意数据与这一观点相一致,但这些对民意的影响是否重要到足以影响政策尚不清楚。许多学者认为,加拿大是其他地方的一个例外。本文以加拿大社会援助(福利)政策——社会安全网的核心组成部分——为例考察了这个问题。我们利用了加拿大近期经验的两个显著特征。一个是近几十年来加拿大移民流入的种族和文化多样性的急剧增长,但这种增长的程度在不同地区有很大差异。第二,福利政策因省而异,自20世纪90年代中期以来,各省采用不同方法实施福利计划的能力有所提高。因此,我们研究了相对于人口异质性变化不大的省份,变得更加多样化的省份是否会减少其福利计划的慷慨程度。我们研究了移民对四种家庭类型的福利率的影响:单身就业者、单身残疾人、单亲父母和有孩子的夫妇。我们的主要发现是,除了有孩子的家庭外,这些类型的移民增加的证据有限。即使在这种情况下,估计的影响也很小。因此,我们的研究支持这样一种观点,即加拿大的经验是一个例子,在这个例子中,更大的多样性并没有减少对再分配社会计划的支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Is There a Tradeoff between Ethnic Diversity and Redistribution? The Case of Income Assistance in Canada
Numerous studies conclude that ethnic/cultural/racial diversity has negative impacts on interpersonal trust and support for redistributive social programs. Although some Canadian public opinion data is consistent with this view, whether these impacts on public opinion are important enough to influence policy is unclear. Many scholars argue that Canada is an exception to experience elsewhere. This paper examines this question for the case of Canadian social assistance (welfare) policies - a central component of the social safety net. We exploit two salient features of recent Canadian experience. One is dramatic growth in the ethnic and cultural diversity of Canada's immigrant inflows in recent decades, but the extent of this growth has varied substantially across regions. The second is that welfare policies vary across provinces, and the ability of the provinces to employ different approaches to welfare programs has increased since the mid-1990s. We thus examine whether provinces that became more diverse reduced the generosity of their welfare programs, relative to provinces that experienced little change in the heterogeneity of their populations. We examine impacts of immigration on welfare benefit rates of four family types: single employables, single disabled, lone parents and couples with children. Our main finding is that there is limited evidence of increased immigration on any of these types other than families with children. Even in this case the estimated effects are small. Our study thus supports the view that Canada's experience stands as an example in which greater diversity has not reduced support for redistributive social programs.
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