Abstract
This paper aims at analysing the effectiveness and the efficiency of social public expenditure in 22 European countries. We present a basic theoretical framework connecting the choice of the level of social protection to the median voter’s preferences and the inefficiency of expenditure. To test it against real data, we construct performance and efficiency indicators. While the existing literature measures the performance of social policy restricting the analysis to its impact on inequality and the labour market, our index summarises the outcomes achieved in all sectors of social protection (family, health, labour market elderly, disabled, unemployment, inequality). Based on this, we find that the ranking of countries differs from those found in the literature. We then put together performance and the amount of expenditure needed to achieve it (to better compare countries, we use social public expenditure net of tax and transfers), constructing efficiency indicators. Our results suggest that countries with a higher social expenditure inefficiency index present a greater variability of performance in all subsectors considered.
Highlights
While the existing literature measures the performance of social policy restricting the analysis to its impact on inequality and the labour market, our index summarises the outcomes achieved in all sectors of social protection
The performance index we present summarises the outcomes achieved in all sectors of social protection, as specified in the OECD Social Expenditure Database (SOCX): family, health, labour market, elderly, disabled, unemployment, and inequality
The performance index we present in the paper, instead, summarises the outcomes achieved in all sectors of social protection, as specified in the OECD So
Summary
The effectiveness and efficiency of social public expenditure in European countries has been the object of political and theoretical debate along the convergence path undergone by national welfare systems [1]. This is taking place as an effect. Within this debate, the aim of this paper is to study the outcomes and the efficiency of social policies in European countries as they appear in 2013, the last year for which it is possible to obtain data for a fairly large number of countries (22). The performance index we present summarises the outcomes achieved in all sectors of social protection, as specified in the OECD Social Expenditure Database (SOCX): family, health, labour market, elderly, disabled, unemployment, and inequality
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