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American Political Science Review (2004), 98: 243-260 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © 2004 by the American Political Science Association
doi:10.1017/S0003055404001121
Published online by Cambridge University Press 21 Jun 2004


ARTICLES

Privatizing Risk without Privatizing the Welfare State: The Hidden Politics of Social Policy Retrenchment in the United States


JACOB S. HACKER a1c1
a1 Yale University

Abstract

Over the last decade, students of the welfare state have produced an impressive body of research on retrenchment, the dominant thrust of which is that remarkably few welfare states have experienced fundamental shifts. This article questions this now-conventional wisdom by reconsidering the post-1970s trajectory of the American welfare state, long considered the quintessential case of social policy stability. I demonstrate that although most programs have indeed resisted retrenchment, U.S. social policy has also offered increasingly incomplete risk protection in an era of dramatic social change. Although some of this disjuncture is inadvertent—an unintended consequence of the very political stickiness that has stymied retrenchment—I argue that the declining scope of risk protection also reflects deliberate and theoretically explicable strategies of reform adopted by welfare state opponents in the face of popular and change-resistant policies, a finding that has significant implications for the study of institutional change more broadly.


Correspondence:
c1 Peter Strauss Family Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Yale University, P.O. Box 208301, New Haven, CT 06520-8301 (jacob.hacker@yale.edu).


Cambridge University Press