Hardback
Challenges to the Welfare State
Family and Pension Policies in the Baltic and Nordic Countries
9781839106101 Edward Elgar Publishing
This comprehensive and innovative book demonstrates the dynamics of welfare policies in different socioeconomic settings by providing comparative analyses of the Baltic and Nordic welfare state systems. The book contributes to finding and reflecting upon innovative solutions to common challenges in European welfare states.
More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
More Information
This comprehensive and innovative book demonstrates the dynamics of welfare policies in different socioeconomic settings by providing comparative analyses of the Baltic and Nordic welfare state systems. The book contributes to finding and reflecting upon innovative solutions to common challenges in European welfare states.
Challenging conventional welfare state research, the authors compare the Nordic countries with the welfare states of the market-oriented democracies of the Baltic area, discussing welfare state theories, family policy regimes and welfare state models. Top international contributors provide a better understanding of the complex inequalities that families and individuals are facing in the 21st century, and cover important topics such as poverty, social insurance and family policy in the Nordic and Baltic areas.
Challenges to the Welfare State will be of great interest to social policy scholars and policy makers, particularly those with an interest in the Baltic and Nordic countries. It will also be a welcome addition to the literature for students interested in family policy and pension protection reforms, and those with a general interest in the contemporary welfare state studies in Europe.
Challenging conventional welfare state research, the authors compare the Nordic countries with the welfare states of the market-oriented democracies of the Baltic area, discussing welfare state theories, family policy regimes and welfare state models. Top international contributors provide a better understanding of the complex inequalities that families and individuals are facing in the 21st century, and cover important topics such as poverty, social insurance and family policy in the Nordic and Baltic areas.
Challenges to the Welfare State will be of great interest to social policy scholars and policy makers, particularly those with an interest in the Baltic and Nordic countries. It will also be a welcome addition to the literature for students interested in family policy and pension protection reforms, and those with a general interest in the contemporary welfare state studies in Europe.
Critical Acclaim
‘In this important book, the authors offer a rich and multifaceted comparative analysis of family policies and pension protection systems in the Baltic and Nordic countries. By exploring two rarely contrasted socioeconomic settings, the authors brilliantly uncover not only similarities and differences in welfare provision but also lay bare the changes and challenges now taking place in them.’
– Åsa Lundqvist, Lund University, Sweden
‘Baltic countries are underrepresented in comparative welfare state studies and this volume addresses this unfortunate situation by addressing contemporary social policy challenges facing both Baltic and Nordic countries in the areas of family policy and pension protection. Featuring an excellent line-up of scholars, this unique volume makes a distinguished contribution to the comparative social policy literature and it offers unique insights for scholars and practitioners alike.’
– Daniel Béland, McGill University, Canada
– Åsa Lundqvist, Lund University, Sweden
‘Baltic countries are underrepresented in comparative welfare state studies and this volume addresses this unfortunate situation by addressing contemporary social policy challenges facing both Baltic and Nordic countries in the areas of family policy and pension protection. Featuring an excellent line-up of scholars, this unique volume makes a distinguished contribution to the comparative social policy literature and it offers unique insights for scholars and practitioners alike.’
– Daniel Béland, McGill University, Canada
Contributors
Contributors: Jolanta Aidukaite, Mare Ainsaar, Sunnee Billingsley, Šarūnas Eirošius, Mia Hakovirta, Barbara Hobson, Sven E.O. Hort, Stein Kuhnle, Kati Kuitto, Susan Kuivalainen, Teodoras Medaiskis, Gerda Neyer, Mikael Nygård, Livia Sz. Oláh, Axel West Pedersen, Magnus Piirits, Olga Rajevska, Kristina Senkuviene, Mona Sõukand, Katharina Wesolowski
Contents
Contents:
Preface xii
1 Introduction: Baltic and Nordic countries from
a comparative perspective – family policies and pensions
in the era of ageing 1
Jolanta Aidukaite, Sven E. O. Hort and Stein Kuhnle
PART I PERSPECTIVES ON FAMILY POLICY
2 Family support systems in the Baltic and Nordic countries:
an explorative overview 11
Jolanta Aidukaite
3 Demographic challenges of Europe in the new millennium:
Swedish family policies as an answer to them 33
Livia Sz. Oláh and Gerda Neyer
4 Nordic family policy in the 2000s: from a ‘transfer-based’
towards a ‘service-based’ family policy? 52
Mia Hakovirta and Mikael Nygård
5 Family policy support for the earner-carer and
traditional-family models in Lithuania and Sweden1 72
Katharina Wesolowski, Sunnee Billingsley and Gerda Neyer
6 The sustainability of family support systems in the 21st
century: comparing Sweden and Lithuania 94
Jolanta Aidukaite and Kristina Senkuviene
7 Cost of childcare: evolution of regional diversity in Estonia 119
Mare Ainsaar and Mona Sõukand
PART II PERSPECTIVES ON PENSION PROTECTION
IN THE ERA OF AGEING
8 Ageing and the welfare state: welfare policies and attitudes in the Baltic and Nordic countries 137
Jolanta Aidukaite, Sven E. O. Hort and Mare Ainsaar
9 Gender inequalities in family leaves, employment and
pensions in Finland 160
Kati Kuitto and Susan Kuivalainen
10 Approaches to minimum-income protection in old age:
comparing the three Scandinavian countries 180
Axel West Pedersen
11 Pension systems as risk management: a case of the Baltic states 202
Olga Rajevska
12 Looking for an adequate and sustainable old-age pension
system: comparing Sweden and Lithuania 224
Teodoras Medaiskis and Šarūnas Eirošius
13 The inequality of public pension benefits for the elderly
using Estonian data 248
Magnus Piirits
14 Stretching the canvas: beyond welfare state typologies to
capability and agency 267
Barbara Hobson
Index
Preface xii
1 Introduction: Baltic and Nordic countries from
a comparative perspective – family policies and pensions
in the era of ageing 1
Jolanta Aidukaite, Sven E. O. Hort and Stein Kuhnle
PART I PERSPECTIVES ON FAMILY POLICY
2 Family support systems in the Baltic and Nordic countries:
an explorative overview 11
Jolanta Aidukaite
3 Demographic challenges of Europe in the new millennium:
Swedish family policies as an answer to them 33
Livia Sz. Oláh and Gerda Neyer
4 Nordic family policy in the 2000s: from a ‘transfer-based’
towards a ‘service-based’ family policy? 52
Mia Hakovirta and Mikael Nygård
5 Family policy support for the earner-carer and
traditional-family models in Lithuania and Sweden1 72
Katharina Wesolowski, Sunnee Billingsley and Gerda Neyer
6 The sustainability of family support systems in the 21st
century: comparing Sweden and Lithuania 94
Jolanta Aidukaite and Kristina Senkuviene
7 Cost of childcare: evolution of regional diversity in Estonia 119
Mare Ainsaar and Mona Sõukand
PART II PERSPECTIVES ON PENSION PROTECTION
IN THE ERA OF AGEING
8 Ageing and the welfare state: welfare policies and attitudes in the Baltic and Nordic countries 137
Jolanta Aidukaite, Sven E. O. Hort and Mare Ainsaar
9 Gender inequalities in family leaves, employment and
pensions in Finland 160
Kati Kuitto and Susan Kuivalainen
10 Approaches to minimum-income protection in old age:
comparing the three Scandinavian countries 180
Axel West Pedersen
11 Pension systems as risk management: a case of the Baltic states 202
Olga Rajevska
12 Looking for an adequate and sustainable old-age pension
system: comparing Sweden and Lithuania 224
Teodoras Medaiskis and Šarūnas Eirošius
13 The inequality of public pension benefits for the elderly
using Estonian data 248
Magnus Piirits
14 Stretching the canvas: beyond welfare state typologies to
capability and agency 267
Barbara Hobson
Index