Discarding social investment and redistribution in the name of austerity? The case of Finnish family policy reforms 2007—2015

Since the 1970s, Finland has conducted family policies that could be labelled social investments, for example, investments in work–family balance or public childcare, while at the same time it has protected the economic standard of families with children through various income transfers. However, af...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mikael Nygård, Josefine Nyby, Mikko Kuisma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-07-01
Series:Policy & Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14494035.2019.1655834
id doaj-b3af8a8421ee40979fb9e2f8e4a061c0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b3af8a8421ee40979fb9e2f8e4a061c02020-11-24T21:49:44ZengTaylor & Francis GroupPolicy & Society1449-40351839-33732019-07-0138351953610.1080/14494035.2019.16558341655834Discarding social investment and redistribution in the name of austerity? The case of Finnish family policy reforms 2007—2015Mikael Nygård0Josefine Nyby1Mikko Kuisma2Åbo Akademi UniversityÅbo Akademi UniversityUniversity of TübingenSince the 1970s, Finland has conducted family policies that could be labelled social investments, for example, investments in work–family balance or public childcare, while at the same time it has protected the economic standard of families with children through various income transfers. However, after the 2008–2009 financial crisis these policies including those with socially investing objectives have been increasingly subjected to cuts in benefit levels and entitlements in order to lower public expenditure, which raises the question if there has been a shift away from social investments and redistribution towards austerity policies. By analysing government programs from the period 2007–2015, this article discusses if, and to what extent, such a change can be traced in the Finnish government discourse. More specifically the article studies the narrative stories used to legitimise changes (reforms) in existing family policy and to what extent these changes were informed by a social investment perspective focusing on ‘new’ social risks, a traditional redistribution perspective emphasising ‘old’ social risks, or a neoliberal austerity perspective advocating fiscal austerity and welfare cuts. We argue that the first two perspectives were dominant prior to and during the first phase of the international financial crisis, whereas the third perspective became dominant after the crisis. Moreover, the results show that the main storyline in the legitimisation of the reforms was stories of ‘progress’ in combination with stories of ‘control’ and helplessness’.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14494035.2019.1655834Family policy reformFinlandideasnarrative storiesGovernment program
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mikael Nygård
Josefine Nyby
Mikko Kuisma
spellingShingle Mikael Nygård
Josefine Nyby
Mikko Kuisma
Discarding social investment and redistribution in the name of austerity? The case of Finnish family policy reforms 2007—2015
Policy & Society
Family policy reform
Finland
ideas
narrative stories
Government program
author_facet Mikael Nygård
Josefine Nyby
Mikko Kuisma
author_sort Mikael Nygård
title Discarding social investment and redistribution in the name of austerity? The case of Finnish family policy reforms 2007—2015
title_short Discarding social investment and redistribution in the name of austerity? The case of Finnish family policy reforms 2007—2015
title_full Discarding social investment and redistribution in the name of austerity? The case of Finnish family policy reforms 2007—2015
title_fullStr Discarding social investment and redistribution in the name of austerity? The case of Finnish family policy reforms 2007—2015
title_full_unstemmed Discarding social investment and redistribution in the name of austerity? The case of Finnish family policy reforms 2007—2015
title_sort discarding social investment and redistribution in the name of austerity? the case of finnish family policy reforms 2007—2015
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Policy & Society
issn 1449-4035
1839-3373
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Since the 1970s, Finland has conducted family policies that could be labelled social investments, for example, investments in work–family balance or public childcare, while at the same time it has protected the economic standard of families with children through various income transfers. However, after the 2008–2009 financial crisis these policies including those with socially investing objectives have been increasingly subjected to cuts in benefit levels and entitlements in order to lower public expenditure, which raises the question if there has been a shift away from social investments and redistribution towards austerity policies. By analysing government programs from the period 2007–2015, this article discusses if, and to what extent, such a change can be traced in the Finnish government discourse. More specifically the article studies the narrative stories used to legitimise changes (reforms) in existing family policy and to what extent these changes were informed by a social investment perspective focusing on ‘new’ social risks, a traditional redistribution perspective emphasising ‘old’ social risks, or a neoliberal austerity perspective advocating fiscal austerity and welfare cuts. We argue that the first two perspectives were dominant prior to and during the first phase of the international financial crisis, whereas the third perspective became dominant after the crisis. Moreover, the results show that the main storyline in the legitimisation of the reforms was stories of ‘progress’ in combination with stories of ‘control’ and helplessness’.
topic Family policy reform
Finland
ideas
narrative stories
Government program
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14494035.2019.1655834
work_keys_str_mv AT mikaelnygard discardingsocialinvestmentandredistributioninthenameofausteritythecaseoffinnishfamilypolicyreforms20072015
AT josefinenyby discardingsocialinvestmentandredistributioninthenameofausteritythecaseoffinnishfamilypolicyreforms20072015
AT mikkokuisma discardingsocialinvestmentandredistributioninthenameofausteritythecaseoffinnishfamilypolicyreforms20072015
_version_ 1725887833980272640