1st Edition
Not Only the Poor The Middle Classes and the Welfare State
Originally published in 1987 Not Only the Poor explores the self-interested involvement of the non-poor in the welfare state, particularly the middle class. Using evidence from Britain, America, and Australia, they show that the non-poor were crucial in the founding of the welfare state, and in all three countries the non-poor benefit extensively from key welfare programmes, including those ostensibly targeted on the poor. Goodin and Le Grand conclude that the beneficial involvement of the non-poor in the welfare state is probably inevitable, but this may be no bad thing, depending on the alternative and on the nature of the egalitarian ideal adopted.
List of Tables and Figures
Preface
Part I: Background
1. Introduction, Robert E. Goodin and Julian Le Grand
2. Measuring the Distributional Impact of the Welfare State: Methodological Issues, Julian Le Grand
Part II: The Origins of the Welfare State
3. Risk Sharing and Social Justice: The Motivational Foundations of the Post-War Welfare State, Robert E. Goodin and John Dryzek
Part III: The Operation of the Welfare State
4. US Anti-Poverty Policy and the Non-Poor: Some Estimates and their Implications, Robert H. Haveman
5. The Middle-Class Use of the British Social Services, Julian Le Grand
6. Creeping Universalism in the Australian Welfare State, Robert E. Goodin and Julian Le Grand
7. Distributional Biases in Social Service Delivery Systems, Robert E. Goodin, Julian Le Grand and D.M. Gibson
Part IV: The Challenge to the Welfare State
8. The Middle Classes and the Defence of the British Welfare State, Julian Le Grand and David Winter
9. The Expansion and Contraction of the American Welfare State, Russell L. Hanson
Part V: Conclusion
10. Not Only the Poor, Robert E. Goodin and Julian Le Grand
About the Author
References
Index
Biography
Robert E Goodin, Julian Le Grand