Abstract

This article examines the interplay between welfare ideas and institutional development and then seeks to explore the ideational background for social policy expansion in China. It focuses on the welfare semantics and narratives that underpin the grand social policy transformation since the millennium. The primary research question concerns whether the approach of “sustainability” is related to social policy in China, and, if yes, how and to what extent. Through the analysis of academic literatures and government documents on social policy in China, we explore the new “sustainability approach” to Chinese social policy that is constructed by social experts and international agencies. While the old sustainability approach overwhelmingly links the “sustainable development” of social policy to the issue of financial affordability and the adequacy of benefit levels, the newly interpreted approach highlights the significant meaning of social policy for long-term and inclusive development over the upcoming decades. Against this backdrop, a holistic national plan for socio-economic modernization has incorporated social policy. Beyond economic and ecological objectives, social development with a focus on social policy has become a key pillar of sustainable development in China.

Highlights

  • Over the previous two decades, Chinese social policy has undergone historically unprecedented development

  • Through the analysis of academic literatures and government documents on social policy in China, we explore the new “sustainability approach” to Chinese social policy that is constructed by social experts and international agencies

  • The old, traditional version of the sustainability approach is preoccupied with the economic, financial, and numerical dimensions of discourses, highlighting the affordability of social insurance programs and the adequacy of the rational benefit levels, which would prevent the country from falling into a welfare trap, in this case, an excessively generous welfare system exceeding national economic strength and fiscal capacity

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Over the previous two decades, Chinese social policy has undergone historically unprecedented development. Through the analysis of the ideational level of social policy development and the interplay between ideas and practical developments in the legal and institutional context, this article proposes the approach of “reinterpreting the connotation of ‘sustainability’” in the Chinese context It argues that the popular “sustainability approach”—which emphasizes financial affordability and the adequacy of benefit levels—has seen competition from a new approach in the post-millennial age, which regards social policy as a prerequisite for China’s sustainable and enduring development, which is no longer solely related to fiscal sustainability, but rather to the sustainability of holistic social development. The national knowledge market has reflected the differentiated and competitive discourses at the international level

Institutional Interplay between Welfare Ideas and Institutions
Global Social Policy and the International Socialization Approach
Research Methods
The Traditional Sustainability Approach
The New Sustainability Approach
Domestic Discourses Shaped by the Cosmopolitan World Community
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call