The Politics of Minimum Income
Explaining Path Departure and Policy Reversal in the Age of Austerity
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Springer International Publishing AG
Published:30th Jan '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Minimum income schemes (MIS) have become key social protection institutions for European citizens, but we know little regarding the logic and dynamics of institutional change in this policy field. This book provides an analytical model that will facilitate an understanding of the scope and direction of recent reforms, offering insight into the conditions under which minimum income schemes are introduced, expandedor retrenched.
Natili presents a comparative analysis of policy trajectories of minimum income schemes in Italy and Spain between the mid-1980s and 2015. Although these two countries had similar points of departure, and faced comparable functional pressures and institutional constraints, they experienced remarkably different developments in this policy field in the last two decades. This comparative analysis provides empirical evidence of the impacts of different types of credit-claiming dynamics resulting from the interaction of socio-political demand withpolitical supply. The Politics of Minimum Income also assesses the reform processes both in countries that have introduced MIS in the age of austerity (such as Portugal) and in countries that have retrenched them (Austria and Denmark).“Natili’s theory will always be worth considering as a possible explanation for policy events, so it is a theory that those who study the political feasibility of Citizen’s Basic Income should be aware of.” (Citizen’s Income newsletter, Issue 2, 2019)
ISBN: 9783319962108
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
318 pages
2019 ed.