Abstract
Mexican social policy has been transformed in recent years with the introduction and expansion of social assistance programmes, causing a diversion from the trajectory based on social insurance since the first decades of the twentieth century. This article aims to understand the outcomes of that transformation, by applying welfare regime theory to establish how social policy reforms have affected the distribution of welfare responsibilities among the state, markets and families. The research identifies (de)commodification and (de)familialisation outcomes of policy changes in pensions, healthcare, unemployment and family support. Results suggest that the expansion has not produced significant reductions in decommodification or defamilialisation because of: a) the explicit or implicit role assigned to markets in policy design and implementation, and b) the reliance of the process of economic liberalisation on the welfare role performed by families. The case of Mexico may illustrate the current welfare challenges faced by societies across Latin America.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Reference80 articles.
1. Velázquez Leyer, R. (2015b) Who Got What from Social Policy Reforms in Mexico? The Redistributive Potential of Changes in the Tax/Benefit System Between 1994 and 2012, PhD Thesis, University of Bath, United Kingdom, at https://purehost.bath.ac.uk/ws/portalfiles/portal/187958770/VELAZQUEZ_LEYER_Ricardo_PhD_Thesis.pdf [accessed 09.06.2020].
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