Making Welfare Work Reconstructing Welfare for the Millennium

Cover of Making Welfare Work Reconstructing Welfare for the Millennium by Frank Field
Author: Frank Field
Publisher: Transaction
Year: 2001
Language: en
Edition: 1
Pages: 211
ISBN-13: 9780765806260
Dimensions:
Height: 9.04 Inches
Length: 6.02 Inches
Weight: 0.7495716908 Pounds
Width: 0.66 Inches
Dewey Decimal: 361.941
Editorial overview Touché

Making Welfare Work Reconstructing Welfare for the Millennium by Frank Field, published by Transaction in 2001, offers a critical examination of the welfare system in the United Kingdom. This edition spans 211 pages and is presented in English. Field argues that the current welfare framework fails to promote independence among recipients, highlighting the detrimental effects of means-testing on self-help and personal integrity.

In this book, Field challenges prevailing political beliefs, emphasizing the need for a welfare system that balances self-interest, self-improvement, and altruism. He discusses various societal issues requiring reform, including the drug trade, benefit traps, and income inequality, providing a well-researched perspective aimed at politicians and policymakers. This analysis serves as a blueprint for potential improvements in welfare policies across industrialized nations, addressing the complexities of social services and public policy.


Official synopsis Publisher

The welfare system in the United Kingdom is broken. The number of claims has escalated and so, in consequence, have welfare expenditures. The social system does not encourage welfare recipients to become independent. Half the population of the United Kingdom lives in households drawing one of the major means-tested benefits. Research documents that means-tests paralyze self-help, discourage self–im-provement, and tax honesty while at the same time rewarding claimants for being either inactive or -deceitful.

In Making Welfare Work, Frank Field challenges the current political orthodoxy, particularly its emphasis on the role of legislation alone in bringing about social improvement in a welfare state. Field argues that the impact legislation has on personal character is pivotal to human advance in a welfare state. Welfare reconstruction needs to address and channel the differing roles of self-interest, self-improvement, and altruism, which are among the great driving forces in human character. A successful welfare state must reinforce these important forces which influence our nature because to create an imbalance between these three motive forces will always undermine welfare’s objectives.

Field discusses in detail aspects of modern British society in dire need of change. These include the drug trade, benefit traps, permanent adolescence, the rise of part-time work, inequality in incomes, excluding the disabled, single parents, and the very elderly, for example. This clearly delineated, well-researched blueprint for success will be important reading for politicians and policymakers in all industrialized nations. Its author is well-positioned to revise and review the welfare policies of democratic -societies.

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This page includes the available description and bibliographic details for “Making Welfare Work Reconstructing Welfare for the Millennium” by Frank Field. Synopsis preview: The welfare system in the United Kingdom is broken. The number of claims has escalated and so, in consequence, have welfare expenditures. The social system does not encourage welfare recipients to become independent. Hal…
Who is the author of “Making Welfare Work Reconstructing Welfare for the Millennium”?
“Making Welfare Work Reconstructing Welfare for the Millennium” is credited to Frank Field.
When was “Making Welfare Work Reconstructing Welfare for the Millennium” published?
Publisher: Transaction. Year: 2001.
What is the ISBN for “Making Welfare Work Reconstructing Welfare for the Millennium”?
ISBN-13: 9780765806260.
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
Language: en. Pages: 211. Edition: 1.

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