dc.description.abstract | Does a more generous welfare state make people happier and increase their life
satisfaction? Available empirical research gives a clear and positive answer to this
question. This goes counter to many arguments that the welfare state creates a culture
of dependency, leads to heavy-handed bureaucratic intrusions into private life, creates
problems concerning personal integrity, is bad for economic growth, implies
stigmatization of the poor, and crowds out civil society and voluntarism. This
counterintuitive result is explained by to which degree social programs are universal
in the coverage and structure. Four common misunderstandings of universal welfare
states are discussed and refuted: This it is too costly for the economy, that it can not
be combined with individual choice, that it does not redistribute in favour of the poor
and that it should be detrimental to economic growth. Using a “social mechanism”
approach, it is argued that the relation between subjective well-being and universal
welfare states operates in a complicated causal pattern with two other variables, the
degree of corruption and the level of social trust in society. This approach is used to
explain why empirically, countries tend to cluster so that countries with large and
mostly universal welfare state programs also have low levels of corruption, a high
degree of social trust, and high levels of happiness and social well-being. And vice
versa, why countries with smaller welfare systems tend to be higher on corruption,
have lower levels of social trust, and lower levels of social well-being. | sv |