Building on studies on the political business cycle, the literature on welfare state retrenchment has argued that governments which cut the welfare state try to avoid blame by implementing painful measures in the beginning of the mandate and expanding benefits as elections approach. In contrast to this linear relationship, this article argues that governments often feel pressured to fulfil (mostly expansionary) campaign promises during the first months in office. Consequently, cutting right away is not what should be expected. Instead, a more nuanced, U-shaped timing trajectory is probable with a period in the beginning characterised by both cuts and fulfilment of expansionary pledges, followed by a period of cutbacks, and finally an expans...
Are governing parties able to shape social and labor market policies according to their ideological ...
A core, but so far untested, proposition of the new politics perspective, originally introduced by P...
Are welfare state reforms electorally dangerous for governments? Only recently have political scient...
Building on studies on the political business cycle, the literature on welfare state retrenchment ha...
Are welfare state reforms electorally dangerous for governments? Political scientists have only rece...
One of the core questions facing political scientists is how politicians are able to implement cutba...
Although theoretically contentious, most empirical studies contend that electoral-political factors ...
Although theoretically contentious, most empirical studies contend that electoral-political factors ...
Current research on welfare state changes should go beyond the notion of retrenchment to be able to ...
The assumption that voters systematically defend the welfare state is challenged by recent research ...
In this article, we shed new light on the question of the degree to which welfare retrenchment has t...
The New Politics of the welfare state suggests that periods of welfare retrenchment present policy-m...
The assumption that voters systematically defend the welfare state is challenged by recent research ...
When harsh cuts were introduced in the Swedish welfare state in an agreement between the centre-righ...
Will voters punish the government for cutting back welfare state entitlements? The comparative liter...
Are governing parties able to shape social and labor market policies according to their ideological ...
A core, but so far untested, proposition of the new politics perspective, originally introduced by P...
Are welfare state reforms electorally dangerous for governments? Only recently have political scient...
Building on studies on the political business cycle, the literature on welfare state retrenchment ha...
Are welfare state reforms electorally dangerous for governments? Political scientists have only rece...
One of the core questions facing political scientists is how politicians are able to implement cutba...
Although theoretically contentious, most empirical studies contend that electoral-political factors ...
Although theoretically contentious, most empirical studies contend that electoral-political factors ...
Current research on welfare state changes should go beyond the notion of retrenchment to be able to ...
The assumption that voters systematically defend the welfare state is challenged by recent research ...
In this article, we shed new light on the question of the degree to which welfare retrenchment has t...
The New Politics of the welfare state suggests that periods of welfare retrenchment present policy-m...
The assumption that voters systematically defend the welfare state is challenged by recent research ...
When harsh cuts were introduced in the Swedish welfare state in an agreement between the centre-righ...
Will voters punish the government for cutting back welfare state entitlements? The comparative liter...
Are governing parties able to shape social and labor market policies according to their ideological ...
A core, but so far untested, proposition of the new politics perspective, originally introduced by P...
Are welfare state reforms electorally dangerous for governments? Only recently have political scient...