Digitalization and the welfare state /
edited by Marius R. Busemeyer, Achim Kemmerling, Paul Marx, Kees Van Kersbergen.
- xvi, 402 pages : illustrations (black and white)
Digitalization and the welfare state : introduction -- Digitalization, automation, and the welfare state: what do we (not yet) know? -- I. Broader trends : is this time different or not? -- Digitalization and the transition to services -- Welfare states, labor markets, social investment, and the digital transformation –- The value and future of work in the digital economy -- The data revolution and the transformation of social protection -- Social solidarity in the age of the internet -- II. The new politics of the welfare state in the digital age -- Automation risk, social policy preferences, and political participation -- Gender, technological risk, and political preferences -- The case for a basic income in the emergent digitalized economy -- Technology, risk, and support for social safety nets : an empirical exploration based on Italy -- Tracing fears about digitalization and automation in social and labor market policy debates -- III. Policies and politics : adaptation, resilience, vulnerabilities -- Political and institutional limits to the rise of platform work -- Internet and platform work in Europe -- Digitalization and automation : the challenges for European pension policies -- The structural adaptability of Bismarckian social insurance systems in the digital age -- Transformation of education policy and governance in the digital era -- Digitalization and the politics of health risks in advanced democracies -- Digitalization and the effects of internal and external modernization in health care systems -- The politics of tax policy in the digital age -- IV. Conclusions -- Digitalization and the future of the democratic welfare state.
"This volume explores how digitalization—in different forms—affects the welfare state. Digitalization is likely to have a lasting impact on work, welfare, and the distribution of income. It will radically transform not only social risks in health, education and the labour market, but also the means by which these risks are addressed. The volume studies how digitalization affects policies as well as the underlying power relationship between actors, i.e. the politics of the welfare state. The volume brings together internationally renowned welfare-state scholars to identify : the socio-economic challenges that result from rapid technological change; the ensuing political conflicts and struggles in the domain of welfare state reform broadly defined; how these changes challenge and shape existing labour market and welfare state arrangements. Overall, the volume explains the potential and real political and policy responses to these challenges, grasps the contours of future developments, and reflects on whether the current wave of technological change might promote the emergence of a new paradigm of welfare state policy-making. The rapid and accelerating pace of technological change has potentially radical ramifications for the welfare state that demand an engagement with possible future scenarios. The authors therefore adopt a forward-looking perspective. Based on this approach, the volume uniquely offers a theoretically informed empirical basis for social science and public debates about the long-term implications of the digital revolution for the welfare state, covering a broad range of policy areas such as education, pensions, labour market policies, tax policy, and health care."--