Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Foreword: The European Union’s evolving social policy and national models – seeking a new balance
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- List of contributors
- one European Union developments and national social protection
- two Germany: moving towards Europe but putting national autonomy first
- three The United Kingdom: more an economic than a social European
- four France: defending our model
- five Italy: between indifference, exploitation and the construction of a national interest
- six Poland: redefining social policies
- seven Spain: starting from periphery, becoming centre
- eight The Czech Republic: tradition compatible with modernisation?
- nine Finland: towards more proactive policies
- ten The Netherlands: social and economic normalisation in an era of European Union controversy
- eleven Denmark: from foot dragging to pace setting in European Union social policy
- twelve Greece: the quest for national welfare expansion through more social Europe
- thirteen The Europeanisation of social protection: domestic impacts and national responses
- fourteen Seeking a new balance
- References
- Index
six - Poland: redefining social policies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Foreword: The European Union’s evolving social policy and national models – seeking a new balance
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- List of contributors
- one European Union developments and national social protection
- two Germany: moving towards Europe but putting national autonomy first
- three The United Kingdom: more an economic than a social European
- four France: defending our model
- five Italy: between indifference, exploitation and the construction of a national interest
- six Poland: redefining social policies
- seven Spain: starting from periphery, becoming centre
- eight The Czech Republic: tradition compatible with modernisation?
- nine Finland: towards more proactive policies
- ten The Netherlands: social and economic normalisation in an era of European Union controversy
- eleven Denmark: from foot dragging to pace setting in European Union social policy
- twelve Greece: the quest for national welfare expansion through more social Europe
- thirteen The Europeanisation of social protection: domestic impacts and national responses
- fourteen Seeking a new balance
- References
- Index
Summary
Defining Poland's official position towards European social policy initiatives is difficult, because as a result of parliamentary elections in the autumn of 2005 the right-wing Law and Justice Party took power and announced a radical political transformation. The former left-wing liberal government declared support for modernising the European social model (ESM), focusing on employability and vocational activation. Instead, the present ruling elite seem to emphasise the need to ‘maintain the European social model based on solidarity’. This emphasis may signify a major shift in the approach to adapting Polish solutions to the concept of the ESM: a weakening of the commitment to implement modernisation processes in favour of maintaining existing solutions in Poland.
The slogan of social solidarity, as opposed to liberalism, was one of the pillars of the parliamentary campaign of the winning party. However, so far the present government has not incorporated this position into its social programme. Thus social policy is at an intermediate stage, that is, abandonment of the earlier approach is not accompanied by a clear indication of the scope of change.
The European social model versus the Polish model
The social model of Poland, shaped by the reforms of the transformation period, is a mix of conservative-corporate elements and elements of a liberal model (on typologies, see Esping-Andersen, 1999). The model comprises both the Bismarckian tradition of the 19th and early 20th centuries, and the most contemporary reforms dominated by liberal trends.
Poland's spending on social protection at about 23-24% of GDP (gross domestic product) is roughly at the average European level. Social transfers equal around 18% of GDP and are among the highest in the European Union (EU). Spending is dominated by cash benefits, replacing employment earnings (pensions). By contrast, expenditure on social services is very low (Woycicka, 2003). The main reasons for the relatively high poverty rate experienced by Poland are unemployment and poor economic activity. The past 16 years in Poland have been characterised by an increasing number of economically inactive citizens, high unemployment and fast differentiation of income. These outcomes obviously result from a rapid and exceptional restructuring of the economy, with the overlapping of processes generated by the globalisation of the economy and those of the transformation of the system.
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- The Europeanisation of Social Protection , pp. 99 - 116Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2007