Targeting within universalism

Author:

Jacques Olivier1,Noël Alain2

Affiliation:

1. McGill University, Canada

2. Université de Montréal, Canada

Abstract

The idea of targeting within universalism has been evoked frequently, usually as a best of both worlds’ strategy. The approach remains difficult to identify, however, because targeting is usually measured as the opposite of universalism. This article proposes to consider targeting and universalism as two distinct dimensions of the welfare state, the opposite of universalism being more usefully understood as residualism, and not as pro-poor targeting. Four welfare state possibilities then emerge, combining a position on the universalism/residualism axis and one on the pro-poor/pro-rich axis: universalism (France, for instance), targeting within universalism (Denmark), targeting within residualism (the United States) and pro-rich residualism (Japan). We show that targeting within universalism entails pro-poor targeting without means testing, a combination that can be achieved with limits on the earnings-relatedness of the pension system and generous transfers to the working age population. Thus understood, targeting within universalism proves to be an effective redistributive strategy, better to redistribute than mere targeting, and less costly than universalism pure and simple.

Funder

social sciences and humanities research council of canada

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,General Social Sciences

Reference39 articles.

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2. Universalism in the British and Scandinavian Social Policy Debates

3. Universalism and the Challenge of Diversity

4. Public/Private Pension Mix, Income Inequality and Poverty among the Elderly in Europe: An Empirical Analysis Using New and Revised OECD Data

5. The Universal Decline of Universality? Social Policy Change in Canada, Denmark, Sweden and the UK

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