War Between the State and the Family

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A01=Patricia Morgan
Author_Patricia Morgan
Average Income
British Household Panel Study
Category=JKS
Category=KCP
Child Support Liability
Deputy Prime Minister's Office
Deputy Prime Minister’s Office
divorce law reform
economic sociology
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family policy analysis
family structure policy impact
Fourth Deciles
Genuine Liberalism
Household Fragmentation
household structure research
In-work Benefits
John Ermisch
lone
Lone Mothers
Lone Parent Families
Lone Parents
Mandatory Child Support
Marital Childbearing
Millennium Cohort Study
Monthly AFDC
Non-working Lone Parent
Out-of Work Benefits
Separation Rates
Single Earner Couples
social welfare economics
tax benefit incentives
Unwed Childbearing
Usual Debt
Welfare Reforms
Working Age Disabled People
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412807548
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Apr 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Patricia Morgan's core assumption is that the family is an extremely effective vehicle for raising the welfare of its members. If this is correct it is quite possible that the state can best support the family by doing very little--by not taxing the family heavily and by minimizing the subsidization of those who choose alternatives to financially self-sustaining family life.

At one level, Morgan argues, the family can be seen as a unit within which there occurs enormous transfer of economic resources between husband and wife, parents and children, and, on a wider scale, within extended families. The family is the most important vehicle of welfare and the welfare vehicle of first resort. Within the family many services are provided by family members to each other, rarely for direct personal benefit. Basic economic analysis, Morgan asserts, suggests that the family could be seriously undermined if the state provided significant support for dependents who are not brought up within self-sustaining family units, and if it also provided services, such as childcare, that are generally provided within families. This work shows that this is precisely what has happened in the last twenty-five years.

The driving force of significantly reduced family formation is not economic but social. Perhaps social changes have led to a desire by individuals to bring up children in family circumstances different from those of a generation or two ago, but evidence does not support this hypothesis. Rather, tax and benefit systems seem to be important determinants of family structure worldwide. Patricia Morgan does not simply analyze the problem, she also suggests policy solutions. The author argues that divorce laws should be reformed to ensure that those who make commitments are held financially responsible. The author's argument is compelling because it is backed up with strong evidence and is argued from an unemotional economic perspective--individuals within families are rational agents who respond to incentives.

Patricia Morgan has published extensively on crime, the family, adoption and welfare policy over more than twenty years. Her most recent books are Family Structure and Economic Outcomes (2004), for the Economic Research Council, Family Matters: Family Breakdown and Its Consequences (a study in the New Zealand context, 2004) and Family Policies, Family Changes (based on Sweden, Italy and the UK, published in 2006). She is Visiting Fellow at the School of Humanities, Buckingham University.

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