2. The Welfare State arose out of crisis
•War, revolution and eugenics
•Industrialisation and the end of older social
structures
•Economic uncertainty, depression, mass
poverty
4. ...but may be we can still learn
•Can the state plan everything on our behalf?
•How do we cope with further social change?
•Are there not injustices we still need to tackle?
6. Professional gift
model
•> 40% of GDP committed to welfare
•Government transfers much
responsibility for delivering welfare
to professions
•Professions organise support
around their expertise.
•Citizens have low levels of control,
weak entitlements and often face
perverse incentives
7. Citizenship model
•Build-in citizen
control
•Assume the value
and role of
community
•Rethink
professional roles
•Redefine gifts as
entitlements and
contracts
19. Place Number Change
6 Sites Phase I Report 60 -18%
17 Sites Phase II Report 128 -9%
13 Sites IBSEN Report 203 -6%
Northants 17 -18.7%
City of London 10 -30%
Worcestershire 73 -17%
22. Total Place
•Partnership to achieve
locally defined
outcomes
•Build on local assets
•Coproduce solutions
•Think beyond services
- people &
communities
•Create possibility of
innovation
28. Redesigning the Welfare State
•The system needs to be understandable and clear, we
need to know where we stand - our rights and our
duties
•The system needs to ensure people get what they
need in order to be full citizens - money, support etc.
•The system needs to encourage people to earn, learn,
save, love and build stronger families
•The system needs to encourage innovation, creativity
and stronger, more vibrant civil society
•Government needs to protect rights and learn what is
working and what can be improved.
29. Contact Details
Simon Duffy
Centre for Welfare Reform
The Quadrant,
99 Parkway Avenue, Parkway Business Park
Sheffield, S9 4WG
T +44 114 251 1790
M +44 7729 7729 41
admin@centreforwelfarereform.org
www.centreforwelfarereform.org