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This article looks heavily biased against the idea of welfare state. Furthermore, why should it be kept separate from Social welfare? David.Monniaux 17:35, 1 Apr 2004 (UTC)

The reason to keep it apart might be something like not confusing the European understanding of "Welfare" (when translated to English, that is) and the American meaning of the same word. ...or is it the US meaning, maybe? ...or have I got all wrong?

--Ruhrjung 21:02, 1 Apr 2004 (UTC)

One problem is that the concept of "welfare" does not really exist in some European countries! I cannot translate "welfare" into French. I can translate "welfare state", "social security", but welfare, per se... David.Monniaux 21:07, 1 Apr 2004 (UTC)
My opinion is that you in fr.wikipedia could have an article with the title "Welfare" to introduce francophone readers to the American usage. ;-)
It's surely not without reason that there yet are no interwiki links from Welfare.
--Ruhrjung 21:17, 1 Apr 2004 (UTC)

What is the American meaning for 'welfare'? It translates directly to finnish: 'Hyvinvointi', where 'Hyvin' in this context means 'comfortable/good' and 'vointi' means "the condition of health" or just "health". This is probably why the parts of the article edited by me used to have reference the antidepressants and (the lack of) mental health. I think "welfare state" as being a paradoxical expression in much the same way one could say "war is peace" or "slavery is freedom". Finlander 23:49, 7 Apr 2004 (UTC)

"Some states with extensive welfare programs are wealthy, active first-world states, while more often they tend to be impoverished third-world states".
IMO the article is still biased against the idea of a welfare state. Most states are impoverished third-world states anyway (I don't have any sources right here, but I could guesstimate that there are 30 wealthy countries, 50 in-between and 100 poor countries), and even so there are quite a few wealthy welfare states. Sabbut 07:03, 10 May 2004 (UTC)

--- How many/what kind of social welfare programs are required before you can call a country a welfare state? Is there a more specific definition? Mdchachi|Talk 20:18, 24 May 2004 (UTC)

--- It looks to me that the article is now biased heavily in favour of the welfare state (e.g. Many of the myths advanced in this paragraph are punctured by...), and possibly worse, it reads too much like an essay (littered with references where opinions are presented as fact). If anything these references should be at the bottom of the page, and linked to online sources (this is a web-based encyclopedia, after all), but it might be better if some of them were scrapped completely.

One of the problems with Wikipedia is reducing articles to "he said this, she said this", but where articles become "this is true because so-and-so said this" it shows why such a position is necessary. Someone looking up "welfare state" wants to know what it is, not to receive an argument one way or another. StuartH 06:58, 25 Jun 2004 (UTC)

--- I think that Canada should also be included in the welfare states list.

---

I'm not sure if you realize, but private healthcare in the US is pretty different from private healthcare in the rest of the world. For instance, around here, if someone falls, we don't CAT scan their heads. We also don't get sued really that much. Most of all, our health care system and insurances aren't as sturdily and heavily regulated as yours. So, if you want to make the argument that state-owned business is cheaper than private, you have to use another example, USA's won't do. Try Netherlands, for instance, where healthcare is done wholly private with private insurance companies, the coverage is 100% and they even have dental in it. Most of all, I think they teach in pretty much every economic school around here that private enterprise is cheaper than public. I believe this is pretty much an objective fact. --62.78.199.159 20:26, 3 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Then I guess they don't teach about market failure in every economic school around there, do they? Privatized health care, in particular, often turns out to be a complete disaster due to the extreme inbalance of knowledge between buyer and seller (you don't know enough about medicine to be able to choose between the different treatments given by different doctors; in other words, the buyer of health care services cannot accurately determine the quality of the product he is buying). -- Mihnea Tudoreanu 12:15, 29 Sep 2004 (UTC)

First off I am a full supporter of the welfare state and think its the best way of going about things, however, I've got to say that this is biased in favor of a welfare state. If you give the argument and evidence for the welfare state, you have to give the argument AND evidence against.

Contents

1 lack of reference to 'three worlds of welfare capitalism'

Non-neutral

  • As this page stands, it appears to be heavily biased in favor of welfare-statism, presenting schoolboy rebuttal (without even qualifying it by saying "advocates of the welfare state claim...") of grossly oversimplified arguments against welfare statism without presenting either the arguments or the facts that favor liberalism over the welfare state. I've given it the NPOV tag in the hope that somebody can come along and balance it out. - Bkalafut 05:36, 20 Nov 2004 (UTC)

lack of reference to 'three worlds of welfare capitalism'

Comparative research on the welfare state (in particular the work of esping-andersen and many other researchers following on his line of argumentation) provided us with excellent typology to explain differences in welfare state development and also to understand the effects of these differences. I think that a reference to this literature would partially solve the problem of this article.

The important question is not so much whether their is a 'small' or a 'big' welfare state. What has to be taken into account is that the type and degree of government involvement in the provision differs. In particular these differences relate to the power-distribution and the prevalence of particular ideological views at certain critical moments when social security programs were adopted: States that had a strong presence of Social Democracy chose highly redistributive, universal social security measures (e.g. Sweden and other Scandinavian countries). Christian democratic political forces relied on measures that protect the income and status of the breadwinner (e.g. Germany, Italy...). In countries that had neither strong Social Democrats nor strong Christian Democrats tended to rely on lean state involvement providing basic social security nets and delegating the generation of welfare primarily to the market, private initiatives and families (e.g. USA).

Each welfare regime has particular effects (e.g. on social stratification or on the labour market). (1) The Social Democratic regimes due to the highly redistributive schemes do best in terms of reduction of inequality, this comes at the cost of high taxes. Because of the universality of the welfare system, international labour mobility (e.g. in the context of the Single European Market)causes problems. (2) The Christian Democratic regimes, although much money is transfered through the state, do not have the same equalizing effects than the universial regimes. Because welfare contributions and benefits mainly depend on the wage level, these transfer have status preserving effects. The strong protection of the (mostly male) breadwinner in the labour market has the problematic side-effect of higher levels of unemployment among the non-protected (mostly the young and to a certain degree also women). On the other hand, the high protection of the employees also incites them to invest in highly speicalized skills, which in turn has effects on the structure of the economy. (3) The liberal regimes have more or less neutral effects on social stratification: neither is inequality reduced nor does the state contribute to preserve the status of an individual. The labour market is characterized by high mobility and the individual is largely self-responsible for coping with social risks (illness, unemployment, old age...).

Arguments for and against the welfare state

I have attempted to balance this article by putting in a bullet-point list of arguments both for and against. This should offer contributors a basic structure for putting arguments on either side. Unfortunately, this insertion has been persistently vandalised. I ask contributors to watch the site and ensure the restoration of the balance whenever it is removed. Paul Spicker 1st December 2004.

It's not a matter of balance, since the disputed section does not add any POV; rather, it's an issue of whether or not a simplistic bullet-point list should be added. I believed it should not. However, I won't insist on the point if you really want the list to stay. It may cause a bit of confusion, but it doesn't do any serious harm to the article. I think we can declare this dispute closed. -- Mihnea Tudoreanu 13:18, 30 Nov 2004 (UTC)

I think that you have to be careful not to confuse the economic effects of high taxation and those of the welfare state. High income tax or corporation tax has a depressing effect on the economy whereas high land tax has a stimulating effect, so when you're talking about high levels of taxation it's important to describe which type of taxation you mean. However since this is article is about the Welfare state rather than taxation, it should be listing pros and cons of the welfare state, not of some unspecified form of taxation. -- Derek Ross | Talk 06:52, 2004 Dec 8 (UTC)

In order to have a stable welfare state, you need money to provide for the welfare services, which is taken from citizens in the form of taxes. The tax code for welfare states is complex, since every industry that is nationalised has its own code. With each industry having their own tax, it would be difficult to explain which one has what, and impossible to do so in a bullet-point format. -- cold wolf 12:45, 8 December 2004 (UTC)

Of course you need the money. That's obvious. But you assume once again that the money must be taken from each citizen in the form of taxes (or insurance charges which amount to much the same thing). That does not have to be the case. The money can be raised in other ways which do not involve taxing citizens -- for instance resource taxes which are charges on resources rather than on citizens. -- Derek Ross | Talk 21:09, 2004 Dec 8 (UTC)

"Arguments for" and "Arguments against"

The problem with separating out arguments for and against in different sections is that it denies contributors the opportunity to counter arguments. I propose in consequence to revert to the previous layout, unless there are reasoned objections. Paul Spicker

Heavily biased in favour of the welfare state. It pains me to see Wikipedia suffer from a persistent left-wing bias. [Delsheol]
Welfare statism is not exclusively a left-wing phenomenon. Many right-wing regimes have developed welfare states - there are two examples much in the global news in recent months, and a major example in Europe in the mid 20th century that had global military repercussions. I think it is probably only from an American perspective (possibly shared by a few other western states) that welfare statism can be said to correlate with left-wing political ideas, since in these states there has long been a correlation between economic ideology and leftist political ideology; but this correlation is hardly inherent. It pains me to see Wikipedia suffer from persistent oversimplification in subjects pertaining to political and economic theory, and I suppose it is sentiments such as the above, with unacknowledged and questionable presuppositions, that lead to it.
In re: Paul Spicker's point above, is there a reason that the article should contain arguments and counter arguments? Isn't a phenomenological and historiographical article enough? Or, if you can't even write a phenomenological and historiographical article on the topic, why should you consider the attempt desirable, and yourselves qualified, to write a disputational article on the subject? Sorry if this sounds harsh, but the article isn't very good. It would be far better if historiography and phenomenology were covered more thoroughly before turning it into a disputation. Jeff Medkeff | Talk 15:36, Jan 28, 2005 (UTC)

Although I understand Jeff Medkeff's point, I don't think it's consistent with Open Source in practice. The content and balance of this article has been disputed by people occupying different political positions, and the article has been consistently prefaced by the NPOV symbol. Contentious arguments are constantly being inserted, deleted and re-inserted. Offering a structure for opposing arguments is the only effective way to achieve some balance. Paul Spicker

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