Bold Relief: Institutional Politics and the Origins of Modern American Social Policy (Princeton Studies in American Politics: Historical, International, and Comparative Perspectives)

by Edwin Amenta

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According to conventional wisdom, American social policy has always been exceptional - exceptionally stingy and backwards. But Edwin Amenta reminds the reader that 60 years ago the US led the world in social provision. He combines historical and political theory to account for this fact - and to explain why the country's leading role was short-lived. The orthodox view is that American social policy began in the 1930s as a two-track system of miserly "welfare" for the unemployed and generous "social security" for the elderly. However, Amenta shows that the New Deal was in fact a bold programme of relief, committed to providing jobs and income support for the unemployed. Social security was, by comparison, a policy afterthought. By the late 1930s, he shows, the US pledged more of its gross national product to relief programmes than did any other major industrial country. Amenta develops and uses an institutional politics theory to explain how social policy expansion was driven by northern Democrats, state-based reformers, and political outsiders. And he shows that retrenchment in the 1940s was led by politicians from areas where beneficiaries of relief were barred from voting.
He also considers why some programmes were nationalized, why some states had far-reaching "little New Deals", and why Britain adopted more generous social programmes.
  • ISBN10 0691017123
  • ISBN13 9780691017129
  • Publish Date 1 March 1998
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 18 January 2011
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Princeton University Press