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THE
SOCIAL INSURANCE MOVEMENT gggff
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| Professor Schlabach's Epilogue summaries his general observations
about the development described in his study--very much in terms
current in the late 1960s. In his emphasis on the issue of "depersonalization"
in rationalized public welfare systems he is sounding a theme that,
while somewhat out-of-fashion in contemporary debates, was nevertheless
a central public concern in the late 1960s. He also offers his general
views about the inadequacies and gaps in the Social Security system.
These criticisms have resonance even to the present day. |
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Rationality &
Welfare: Public Discussion of Poverty and Social Insurance in the
United States 1875-1935
by Professor Theron Schlabach |
| Epilogue |
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On June 8, 1934, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt sent a message to Congress calling for "some safeguard
against misfortunes which cannot be wholly eliminated in this man-made
world of ours," some "sound means which I can recommend to provide
at once security against several of the great disturbing factors of life."
This, he suggested, required a system of "interrelated" social
insurance measures. Within the next several months Roosevelt appointed
a cabinet Committee on Economic Security, and the Committee in turn set
up an extensive organization of staff experts and advisers on the subject.
By January 17, 1935 the Committee and its organization, after wrestling
with many difficult technical and policy questions, had prepared a social
security program for Roosevelt to transmit to Congress. On August 14,
1935 the program in its essential features became law--the historic Social
Security Act.
The formulation of the nation's basic social
security system in 1934-1935, and the criticisms and alterations of that
system since 1935, are stories in themselves. But one fact is clear: 1934-1935
did not represent the complete fulfillment of the quest for a more rationalized
welfare sector, nor did the quest end then. The Social Security Act perpetuated,
indeed entrenched more deeply, some programs that still partook deeply
of the ancient, personalized concepts of welfare. It built heavily on
the method (scarcely questioned either in 1934-1935 or in the long decades
of discussion previously) of treating dependents by categories--a method
that seemed to be highly rational, but which perpetuated different standards
for different people in need, with generally better treatment of those
fortunate enough normally to be economically productive and more questionable
treatment of those so affected by sociological, psychological, and other
maladjustments that their usefulness to the economy is seriously impaired.
With its lack of a health insurance program the Social Security Act left
a gaping hole where one wing of the new security structure should have
stood, a hole that fully-rationalized engineering would hardly have allowed.
Yet the Social Security Act did establish
a basic set of social insurance institutions, which were inherently more
rational than the methods of welfare that preceded them. Whatever its
inadequacies, it was not the false start that the Charity Organization
Society movement had been. And it is interesting to observe, though it
is dangerous to draw superficial conclusions from the fact, that the most
popular part of the social security program has been the most highly rationalized
part, old age (and survivors', disability, and health) insurance; while
the most troublesome has been that part most like the older personalized
welfare, aid to families with dependent children. Moreover, the failure
of the Social Security Act to achieve the rational ideal is a story of
the technical problems of actually planning a structure, and of the politics
surrounding social security, more than one of fundamental social security
concepts. Thus it was that in 1934, with social insurance actually in
sight, the urge to rationalize quickly shifted to a question that had
hardly been discussed throughout the years, namely that of more centralized
administration, with the federal government requiring adequate standards
and playing a greater administrative role. And thus it was that for many
years the main discussions of social security were along the lines of
centralizing, extending, and liberalizing the system. More recently, of
course, with discussions of negative income tax and guaranteed income,
the urge to rationalize welfare has taken a form that returns more to
fundamental concepts.
The mood of the present day, with its sometimes
cliché-ridden but sometimes substantive complaints of the impersonality
and facelessness of our social institutions, might suggest that the goal
of a more rationalized, better-structured welfare sector is not one to
pursue. And certainly the fact that the urge to rationalize our institutions
has been evident in the history of social welfare and other institutions
by no means implies that it has been an unmitigated force for good, or
even a force for good on balance. But the historical tension between the
urge to rationalize and the urge toward a more personalized, relational
concept of welfare might suggest that the citizen got recognition of his
personhood and worth precisely as he was assured a place within a set
of protective institutions. Did not an income guarantee backed by a dependable,
automatically-functioning, even impersonal device respect his personality
more than did discretionary treatment by people who had power over his
life? And where he needed personalized services, as economically dependent
persons often have, could not the human relationships have been more healthful
and the services themselves more effective had they been more clearly
separated from the machinery for dispensing income? Though the tension
between a personalized, relational-oriented welfare and a rationalized,
automatically-functioning set of welfare institutions existed in historical
fact, it stemmed from what was finally a false dichotomy in welfare thought.
For institutions and institutionalized relationships can, no doubt, serve
to create a climate for adequate personal relationships. They can provide
the framework for the individual's psychological, legal, and economic
security, a framework within which he then will be free to develop personality
and healthy bonds with other men. |