Book contents
- Race, Class, and Social Welfare
- Race, Class, and Social Welfare
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- 1 American Politics and Social Welfare
- 2 Politics at the Intersection of Race, Class, and Oligarchy
- 3 Civil Rights, Social Welfare, and Populism
- 4 Civil Rights and Populism
- 5 Race, Class, and the End of the New Deal in the US Senate
- 6 Transforming the Twentieth-Century House
- 7 Race, Class, and a Transformed Political Economy
- 8 Dueling Populists and the Political Ecology of 2016
- 9 Conclusion: The Dangers of Upside-Down Populism
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - Conclusion: The Dangers of Upside-Down Populism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 July 2020
- Race, Class, and Social Welfare
- Race, Class, and Social Welfare
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- 1 American Politics and Social Welfare
- 2 Politics at the Intersection of Race, Class, and Oligarchy
- 3 Civil Rights, Social Welfare, and Populism
- 4 Civil Rights and Populism
- 5 Race, Class, and the End of the New Deal in the US Senate
- 6 Transforming the Twentieth-Century House
- 7 Race, Class, and a Transformed Political Economy
- 8 Dueling Populists and the Political Ecology of 2016
- 9 Conclusion: The Dangers of Upside-Down Populism
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Sombart’s (1906) question continues to resonate politically more than 100 years after it was posed. Our effort has refocused the question away from socialism to ask, “Why is there such a meager welfare state in the United States?” Many explanations for American exceptionalism have focused on individualism, individual initiative, and the frontier spirit. While these offer plausible accounts for the resilience of American capitalism and the resistance to government ownership and interference in capital markets and production, they fall short in explaining the relative absence of social welfare benefits being provided by the American government. Other western democracies have managed to combine capitalism and private ownership of the means of production with an extensive network of guaranteed social welfare benefits in health, education, and general welfare. Yet, in the American context, the effort to provide universal social welfare benefits has met with mixed success.
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- Information
- Race, Class, and Social WelfareAmerican Populism Since the New Deal, pp. 182 - 187Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020