Social Policy from Olson to Ostrom: A Case Study of Dutch Disability Insurance |
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Authors: | Duco Bannink |
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Affiliation: | Faculty of Social Sciences, VU University, , Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | Social policy development and reform in corporatist welfare states often follows a pattern of subsequent collectivization and de‐collectivization. This has to do, the article argues, with the social problems these phases address. Early social policy development forms a response to Olson‐type collective action problems that organized actors (labour and employers' organizations) in the field experience: state‐obliged benefits solve free rider problems, while bipartite administration allows labour and employers' organizations to organize their constituencies. This solution to Olson‐type collective action problems, however, also constitutes an Ostrom‐type collective action problem. Such a system functions as a common pool resource. Individual benefit take‐up is experienced as free and the costs of benefit take‐up are collectivized in the common pool. The article illustrates this pattern with reference to Dutch disability insurance. |
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Keywords: | Social policy Collective action Common pool resources Actor‐centred institutionalism Policy change |
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