Experiences with the privatization of home care: evidence from Denmark

Processes of privatization in home care for the elderly in Denmark have primarily taken the form of outsourcing public-care provisions. The content and quality of services have in principle remained the same, but the providers of services have changed. The welfare state has continued to bear the...

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Main Authors: Barbara Fersch, Per H Jensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oslo and Akershus University College 2011-06-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/njsr/article/view/2051
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spelling doaj-50cd804990914957bbeaa3bc805c1c6b2020-11-25T00:33:28ZengOslo and Akershus University CollegeNordic Journal of Social Research1892-27832011-06-01210.7577/njsr.20511232Experiences with the privatization of home care: evidence from DenmarkBarbara Fersch0Per H Jensen1Department of Economics, Politics and Public Administration, Aalborg UniversityDepartment of Economics, Politics and Public Administration, Aalborg University Processes of privatization in home care for the elderly in Denmark have primarily taken the form of outsourcing public-care provisions. The content and quality of services have in principle remained the same, but the providers of services have changed. The welfare state has continued to bear the major responsibility for the provision of elderly care, while outsourcing has allowed clients to choose between public and private providers of care. The major aim of outsourcing has been to empower the frail elderly by providing them with exit-opportunities through a construction of this group as consumers of welfare-state provisions. The central government in Denmark has produced the public-service reform, but the municipalities bear the administrative and financial responsibility for care for the elderly. Further, national policymakers have decided that local authorities (municipalities) must provide to individuals requiring care the opportunities to choose. With this background in mind, this article analyses how national, top-down ideas and the ‘politics of choice' have created tensions locally in the form of municipal resistance and blockages. The article draws on case studies in two Danish municipalities, whereby central politicians and administrative leaders have been interviewed. We have identified four areas of tensions: 1) those between liberal and libertarian ideas and values versus local political orientations and practices; 2) new tensions and lines of demarcation among political actors, where old political conflicts no longer holds; 3) tensions between promises and actual delivery, due to insufficient control of private contractors; and 4) those between market principles and the professional ethics of care providers. https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/njsr/article/view/2051elderly carehome carefree choicemarketizationprivatizationpolitical conflicts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Barbara Fersch
Per H Jensen
spellingShingle Barbara Fersch
Per H Jensen
Experiences with the privatization of home care: evidence from Denmark
Nordic Journal of Social Research
elderly care
home care
free choice
marketization
privatization
political conflicts
author_facet Barbara Fersch
Per H Jensen
author_sort Barbara Fersch
title Experiences with the privatization of home care: evidence from Denmark
title_short Experiences with the privatization of home care: evidence from Denmark
title_full Experiences with the privatization of home care: evidence from Denmark
title_fullStr Experiences with the privatization of home care: evidence from Denmark
title_full_unstemmed Experiences with the privatization of home care: evidence from Denmark
title_sort experiences with the privatization of home care: evidence from denmark
publisher Oslo and Akershus University College
series Nordic Journal of Social Research
issn 1892-2783
publishDate 2011-06-01
description Processes of privatization in home care for the elderly in Denmark have primarily taken the form of outsourcing public-care provisions. The content and quality of services have in principle remained the same, but the providers of services have changed. The welfare state has continued to bear the major responsibility for the provision of elderly care, while outsourcing has allowed clients to choose between public and private providers of care. The major aim of outsourcing has been to empower the frail elderly by providing them with exit-opportunities through a construction of this group as consumers of welfare-state provisions. The central government in Denmark has produced the public-service reform, but the municipalities bear the administrative and financial responsibility for care for the elderly. Further, national policymakers have decided that local authorities (municipalities) must provide to individuals requiring care the opportunities to choose. With this background in mind, this article analyses how national, top-down ideas and the ‘politics of choice' have created tensions locally in the form of municipal resistance and blockages. The article draws on case studies in two Danish municipalities, whereby central politicians and administrative leaders have been interviewed. We have identified four areas of tensions: 1) those between liberal and libertarian ideas and values versus local political orientations and practices; 2) new tensions and lines of demarcation among political actors, where old political conflicts no longer holds; 3) tensions between promises and actual delivery, due to insufficient control of private contractors; and 4) those between market principles and the professional ethics of care providers.
topic elderly care
home care
free choice
marketization
privatization
political conflicts
url https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/njsr/article/view/2051
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