Social transfer programs are thought to generate beneficiary groups who will act politically to defend “their” programs from retrenchment. But little empirical research has been conducted to either verify or disconfirm the micro foundations of this hypothesis, which lies at the heart of the “new social risks” thesis as well as many economic analyses of welfare state politics. This article tests empirically whether benefiting from public pensions leads individuals to greater support of the pension system status quo, net of other factors. It uses cross—data set imputation to combine cross-nationally comparable individual-level data on income from public pensions with political attitudes toward proposed pension reforms. The hypothesis that pub...
The demographic changes occurring in European countries in recent decades have made the public pensi...
Recent unpopular reforms across Europe have invigorated a longstanding debate around what provokes w...
This study is based on analysis of data on trust in pensions from the 2002 British Social Attitudes...
This chapter explores to what degree public opinion, particularly specific social groups including s...
During the post-war years many European countries have implemented far-reaching but diverse pension ...
Over the second half of the 20th Century, pension reform has become central to the European social p...
Pension reform has emerged as a major political issue in most advanced welfare states. Sluggish econ...
Pension systems have often been regarded as difficult to retrench, particularly in the larger conser...
Welfare privatisation is generally analysed as welfare state retrenchment or liberalisation: reducin...
This dissertation seeks to explain cross-national differences in the evolution of public pension pro...
Pension reform has emerged as a major political issue in most advanced welfare states. Sluggish econ...
Since the 1990s, the public pensions landscape in the EU has altered drastically, with reforms chang...
Since the 1990s, the public pensions landscape in the EU has changed drastically, with reforms chang...
Contains fulltext : 151442.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This article ...
In the wake of the global economic and fiscal crisis, welfare states are now entering a new phase of...
The demographic changes occurring in European countries in recent decades have made the public pensi...
Recent unpopular reforms across Europe have invigorated a longstanding debate around what provokes w...
This study is based on analysis of data on trust in pensions from the 2002 British Social Attitudes...
This chapter explores to what degree public opinion, particularly specific social groups including s...
During the post-war years many European countries have implemented far-reaching but diverse pension ...
Over the second half of the 20th Century, pension reform has become central to the European social p...
Pension reform has emerged as a major political issue in most advanced welfare states. Sluggish econ...
Pension systems have often been regarded as difficult to retrench, particularly in the larger conser...
Welfare privatisation is generally analysed as welfare state retrenchment or liberalisation: reducin...
This dissertation seeks to explain cross-national differences in the evolution of public pension pro...
Pension reform has emerged as a major political issue in most advanced welfare states. Sluggish econ...
Since the 1990s, the public pensions landscape in the EU has altered drastically, with reforms chang...
Since the 1990s, the public pensions landscape in the EU has changed drastically, with reforms chang...
Contains fulltext : 151442.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This article ...
In the wake of the global economic and fiscal crisis, welfare states are now entering a new phase of...
The demographic changes occurring in European countries in recent decades have made the public pensi...
Recent unpopular reforms across Europe have invigorated a longstanding debate around what provokes w...
This study is based on analysis of data on trust in pensions from the 2002 British Social Attitudes...