The Dutch welfare state has always posed analytical and empirical puzzles, since existing theories cannot adequately explain the characteristic features of its welfare regime (especially its paternalism and generosity). We discuss two interconnected puzzles about Dutch welfare state development and propose solutions. First, we show that the Dutch exceptionalism is partly an artefact of mainstream typologies that confuse ideal and real types. We resolve this problem and characterize the Dutch welfare state as a very generous welfare system with strong but decreasing paternalist features. This is important because one can expect that reform, especially of generosity, involves a high potential for electoral backlash. Empirically, we observe th...
The Netherlands and Belgium exemplified the pathology of 'welfare without work' that characterized c...
This chapter deals with recent changes in the Dutch welfare state. I use an institutional perspectiv...
When do governments pursue unpopular reform, such as cutting benefits? And when do they engage in no...
The Dutch welfare state has always posed analytical and empirical puzzles, since existing theories c...
This chapter explores how the Dutch welfare system has evolved in the last decade(s). It shows that ...
A recurring idea in welfare state research is that public support for social welfare is related to t...
textabstractThe aim of this research is to better understand what is meant by general support for th...
Why are some governments able to push through radical welfare state reforms while others, operating ...
This chapter attempts to explain the divergent adaptive dynamics to welfare reform and focuses on ca...
The Dutch welfare state is under pressure. Ageing makes public finances unsustainable and globalisat...
The policy that has led from the ‘Dutch disease’ (in the 1980s) to the ‘Dutch miracle’ (in the 1990s...
From the end of the 1970s on some downsides of the growth of the Welfare State in many European coun...
There is growing evidence that voter and party positions on economic items do not conform to a left-...
This article examines the extent to which four major trends in welfare state reform – privatisation,...
Welfare state reform occurs in all advanced capitalist democracies, but it does not occur in identic...
The Netherlands and Belgium exemplified the pathology of 'welfare without work' that characterized c...
This chapter deals with recent changes in the Dutch welfare state. I use an institutional perspectiv...
When do governments pursue unpopular reform, such as cutting benefits? And when do they engage in no...
The Dutch welfare state has always posed analytical and empirical puzzles, since existing theories c...
This chapter explores how the Dutch welfare system has evolved in the last decade(s). It shows that ...
A recurring idea in welfare state research is that public support for social welfare is related to t...
textabstractThe aim of this research is to better understand what is meant by general support for th...
Why are some governments able to push through radical welfare state reforms while others, operating ...
This chapter attempts to explain the divergent adaptive dynamics to welfare reform and focuses on ca...
The Dutch welfare state is under pressure. Ageing makes public finances unsustainable and globalisat...
The policy that has led from the ‘Dutch disease’ (in the 1980s) to the ‘Dutch miracle’ (in the 1990s...
From the end of the 1970s on some downsides of the growth of the Welfare State in many European coun...
There is growing evidence that voter and party positions on economic items do not conform to a left-...
This article examines the extent to which four major trends in welfare state reform – privatisation,...
Welfare state reform occurs in all advanced capitalist democracies, but it does not occur in identic...
The Netherlands and Belgium exemplified the pathology of 'welfare without work' that characterized c...
This chapter deals with recent changes in the Dutch welfare state. I use an institutional perspectiv...
When do governments pursue unpopular reform, such as cutting benefits? And when do they engage in no...