Book contents
- Making Social Spending Work
- Making Social Spending Work
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Appendices
- Part I Overview
- Part II The Long Rise, and Its Causes
- Chapter 3 Why Poor Relief Arrived So Late
- Chapter 4 The Dawn of Mass Schooling before 1914
- Chapter 5 Public Education since 1914
- Chapter 6 More, but Different, Social Spending in Rich Countries since 1914
- Chapter 7 Is the Rest of the World Following a Different Path?
- Part III What Effects?
- Part IV Confronting Threats
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- References
- Index
Chapter 7 - Is the Rest of the World Following a Different Path?
from Part II - The Long Rise, and Its Causes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 April 2021
- Making Social Spending Work
- Making Social Spending Work
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Appendices
- Part I Overview
- Part II The Long Rise, and Its Causes
- Chapter 3 Why Poor Relief Arrived So Late
- Chapter 4 The Dawn of Mass Schooling before 1914
- Chapter 5 Public Education since 1914
- Chapter 6 More, but Different, Social Spending in Rich Countries since 1914
- Chapter 7 Is the Rest of the World Following a Different Path?
- Part III What Effects?
- Part IV Confronting Threats
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
Other regions are indeed following paths that diverge from the route taken by the industrialized leaders over the last two centuries. In terms of the overall effort to spending tax money on social programs, both for social insurance and for public education, while the later-developing regions have spent lower shares of GDP than do the leading rich countries today, they pay higher tax shares for social spending than did the leaders did at the same levels of real income in the past. Fifty years from now, social spending will well take more than twenty percent of GDP in Japan and many countries of Eastern Europe, and even North America. Yet elsewhere many countries, some with low social spending and some with high, appear to be making wrong choices within their social budgets. This criticism applies especially to India, Turkey, Greece, Latin America, and other nations within the global South. These countries generally have lower PISA scores, lower GDP per person, and higher inequality to show for it.
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- Information
- Making Social Spending Work , pp. 122 - 150Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021