484 research outputs found
Welfare state and social spending: assessing the effectiveness and the efficiency of European social policies in 22 EU countries
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 voterâs 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 and a production possibility frontier through the FHD method. We find that efficiency is not related to the size of public intervention. Rather, our results suggest that population size and the type of the welfare system might be more relevant factors: small countries tend to be more efficient than large ones and targeting all sectors of social policy tends to be more efficient than concentrating on some areas only
Efficient social policies with higher expenditure: an analysis for European countries
Based on the construction of two indicators to assess the relative
effectiveness and efficiency of European welfare policies, we show that the
variability of efficiency cannot be explained only by the amount of resources
devoted to social policies but also by the institutional environment. The OLS
regression shows that institutional variables- such as accountability and
honesty of public officials- have high significant effects on the efficiency
Clustering European Welfare Systems through a Performance Index
We construct a composite performance indicator to assess the relative performance of welfare policies in the EU countries. We show that the variability of performances cannot be explained only by the amount of resources devoted to social policies, but also by the composition of social expenditure: countries with higher shares of redistributive public expenditure obtain better results in the social sector. This result confirms the association between the type of welfare system, according to the traditional four-way classification, and the performance level. However, considering a more complete set of indicators of the structure of the welfare systems, we find that European countries cannot be grouped according to the traditional classification. Considering expenditure-side indicators and financing-side indicators together, three groups form: one comprising the UK and Iceland, one the Nordic countries and the Netherlands, one the continental (and southern) countries and Ireland
Quanti sistemi europei di welfare? Unâanalisi in base a dimensioni, struttura, finanziamento.
In questo lavoro esaminiamo le caratteristiche dei sistemi di welfare europei con riferimento alla tradizionale quadripartizione in regimi (nordico, anglosassone, continentale, meridionale), considerando misure della spesa sociale che tengono conto sia della differenza tra spesa lorda e spesa netta, sia di quella tra spesa pubblica e spesa privata. Inoltre, allâanalisi della struttura della spesa pubblica, uniamo quella del finanziamento della stessa. Attraverso il metodo dellâanalisi dei gruppi, troviamo che non esiste una distinzione tra paesi continentali e meridionali, e che lâIrlanda appartiene al gruppo anglo-sassone se si considerano esclusivamente gli indicatori dal lato del finanziamento
Quadrature methods for integro-differential equations of Prandtl's type in weighted spaces of continuous functions
The paper deals with the approximate solution of integro-differential
equations of Prandtl's type. Quadrature methods involving ``optimal'' Lagrange
interpolation processes are proposed and conditions under which they are stable
and convergent in suitable weighted spaces of continuous functions are proved.
The efficiency of the method has been tested by some numerical experiments,
some of them including comparisons with other numerical procedures. In
particular, as an application, we have implemented the method for solving
Prandtl's equation governing the circulation air flow along the contour of a
plane wing profile, in the case of elliptic or rectangular wing-shape.Comment: 34 page
How do european welfare states perform?
The paper proposes an index to evaluate the performance of national social policies in Europ
The numerical solution of Cauchy singular integral equations with additional fixed singularities
In this paper we propose a quadrature method for the numerical solution of Cauchy singular integral
equations with additional fixed singularities. The unknown function is approximated by a weighted
polynomial which is the solution of a finite dimensional equation obtained discretizing the involved
integral operators by means of a Gauss-Jacobi quadrature rule. Stability and convergence results for the
proposed procedure are proved. Moreover, we prove that the linear systems one has to solve, in order to
determine the unknown coefficients of the approximate solutions, are well conditioned. The efficiency of
the proposed method is shown through some numerical examples
Strategic Welfare Policies with Migration: A Theoretical Model and Empirical Evidence
Abstract
We test the welfare magnet hypothesis for Europe. We modify the
existing theoretical frameworks assuming that: (a) welfare services, intended as
the output of welfare expenditure, not the poorâs income or social expenditure,
enter the median voterâs utility function; (b) preferences depend on the position of
the median voter in the income distribution; and (c) the total amount of welfare
services provided may differ from the amount needed to finance them, because of
inefficiencies in the transfer process. We then test the welfare magnet hypothesis
for 22 European countries by estimating a reaction function corresponding to the
generic form adopted by the literature, but using the variables inspired by the
model. We find evidence of a positive strategic interaction among countries, which
suggests a downward bias in the choice of the protection level because of welfare
competition. The level of social protection also positively depends on GDP, the
redistributive attitudes of residents and their weight in the population, vis-Ă -vis
the migrantsâ share, and the efficiency of social expenditure
Approximation of Hilbert and Hadamard transforms on (0, +â)
The authors propose a numerical method for computing Hilbert and Hadamard transforms on (0, +â) by a simultaneous approximation process involving a suitable Lagrange polynomial of degree s and âtruncatedâ Gaussian rule of order m, with s<
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