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The Work Connection Pb (2001 ed.)

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The authors use regulation to explain the antecedents to current welfare developments in Britain.

From discussion of the 'Speenhamland System', the struggle for Family Allowance and a National Minimum Wage, they show how first a Conservative government in the 1970s, and more recently 'New Labour', have used in-work benefits so that today they have become the preferred instrument of intervention in the labour market for setting wages.

The authors discuss the ways in which these measures - the new deals for lone parents and young people and the working family tax credit - address issues of child poverty and the adequacy of incomes, and how far they are disciplining devices to encourage a new moral order, supportive of family life.

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Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
0333754441 / 9780333754443
Paperback / softback
050
31/12/2001
United Kingdom
224 pages, biography
138 x 216 mm
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