EUI Working Paper: SPS, Volumes 4-10European University Institute, 1993 - Europe |
From inside the book
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Page 15
... benefits nearly six times as large as those provided by Alabama . The maximum welfare benefit paid to a California family of three was $ 694 a month , compared with $ 118 paid to a similar family in Alabama ( Peterson and Rom , 1990 : 7 ) ...
... benefits nearly six times as large as those provided by Alabama . The maximum welfare benefit paid to a California family of three was $ 694 a month , compared with $ 118 paid to a similar family in Alabama ( Peterson and Rom , 1990 : 7 ) ...
Page 16
... benefits varied as much in 1990 as they did in 1940. Such disparities give rise to the phenomenon of " welfare magnets " states with comparatively high benefits that attract the poor . However , because of linguistic and cultural ...
... benefits varied as much in 1990 as they did in 1940. Such disparities give rise to the phenomenon of " welfare magnets " states with comparatively high benefits that attract the poor . However , because of linguistic and cultural ...
Page 22
... benefit levels . States differ in their assessment of what a family needs to meet a reasonable standard of living ... benefits for farmers , a social security regime for migrant workers , and some regional redistribution . The social ...
... benefit levels . States differ in their assessment of what a family needs to meet a reasonable standard of living ... benefits for farmers , a social security regime for migrant workers , and some regional redistribution . The social ...
Common terms and phrases
analytic areas of social Author Title Commission Common Agricultural Policy Community between Social Community level Community policymaking consumer protection Council disparities distribution of income EC policymakers EC regulations environment environmental protection EUI Working Paper European Agency European Community European integration European Social Fund European University Institute European welfare example fact Federal Republic government intervention Hans-Peter BLOSSFELD health and safety historical analogy important Information failures innovation internal market Jean BLONDEL justified Leibfried and Pierson level of protection limited market failure Member migrant workers national welfare occupational health Pareto efficient Policy and Social policy space possible principle proposal qualified majority voting quality-of-life issues rationales for government regional redistribution regulatory interventions regulatory policymaking Republic of Germany Rome Treaty San Domenico significant social dimension social Europe social field social security regime standards supranational traditional social policy Treaty of Maastricht Treaty of Rome welfare assistance welfare economics