State Capacity and Social Investment: Explaining Variation in Skills Creation Reforms in Latin America: Explaining Variation in Skills Creation Reforms in Latin America

Juan A. Bogliaccini, Aldo Madariaga

Producción científica: Capítulo del libro/informe/acta de congresoCapítulorevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

Latin America has been historically characterized by a focus on compensatory social policies, state capacity problems, and unstable political coalitions impairing political and policy sustainability. In the 1980s–1990s socioeconomic transformations and a new international policy agenda put emphasis on skills creation. Considering skills creation as a key component of a social investment agenda, this chapter sheds light on how Latin American countries have engaged with this agenda and a legacy of low demand for skilled labor and chronic educational coverage and quality problems. The authors analyze one crucial scope condition for social investment expansion: state capacity. Looking at four countries with different state capacity levels and diverse reform outcomes—Bolivia, Guatemala, Chile, and Uruguay—they argue that state capacity is a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for skills creation social investment. State capacity matters at two crucial moments of the policymaking process: first, as a background variable that affects reform efforts and, second, during the policy implementation period. A second necessary but insufficient condition is how partisan coalitions interact with policy legacies. The authors show that only the two conditions together allow Latin American countries to advance social investment reforms in a sustainable fashion.
Idioma originalInglés estadounidense
Título de la publicación alojadaThe World Politics Of Social Investment
EditoresJulian Garritzmann, Silja Hâusermann, Bruno Palier
EditorialOxford University Press
Capítulo7
Páginas227-250
Volumen1
ISBN (versión impresa)0197585248, 9780197585245, 9780197585276
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 10 jun. 2022

Huella

Profundice en los temas de investigación de 'State Capacity and Social Investment: Explaining Variation in Skills Creation Reforms in Latin America: Explaining Variation in Skills Creation Reforms in Latin America'. En conjunto forman una huella única.

Citar esto