Foundations of Social Democracy
Foundations of Social Democracy
Tobias Gombert u. a.
Foundations of
Social Democracy
SOCIAL DEMOCRACY READER 1
ISBN 978-3-86498-080-0
Published by Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
German Edition: Political Academy, Bonn
2nd, updated English Edition: Division for
International Cooperation, Berlin March 2012
Edited by: Julia Bläsius, Tobias Gombert, Christian Krell, Martin Timpe
Responsible: Dr. Christian Krell / Project Manager: Julia Bläsius (Jochen Dahm)
Printed by: Mauser + Troester GbR, Mössingen // Layout and composition: DIE.PROJEKTOREN, Berlin
Translated by: James Patterson
Cover page photo: Frédéric Cilon, PhotoAlto
The authors of individual sections are solely responsible for the contents.
The opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung.
SOCIAL DEMOCRACY READER 1
Tobias Gombert u. a.
Foundations of
Social Democracy
CONTENTS
Foreword 4
2. Core values 11
2.1. Freedom 12
2.3. Solidarity 36
Bibliography 140
Politics requires a clear sense of direction. Only those who are able to state their
goals clearly will achieve them and inspire others. In light of that, in this Reader
we would like to address the question of what social democracy means in the
twenty-first century. What are its core values? What are its goals? How can it
be put into practice?
One thing is clear: social democracy is not predetermined or set in stone for all
time, but must rather be constantly renegotiated and subject to democratic
contestation. This volume will therefore not provide ready-made answers but
rather seek to encourage further reading and reflection.
Our primary audience is the participants in the educational and training pro-
grammes of the Academy for Social Democracy, where this volume will be used
as a basic text. However, the Reader can also be read and used by anyone who
wishes to play an active role in social democracy or has an interest in it.
In the following pages you will encounter various approaches to social democ-
racy. Freedom, justice and solidarity, social democracy’s core values, serve as
the starting point. Building on that, the ways in which social democracy differs
from other political currents are considered. Thomas Meyer’s Theorie der Sozi-
alen Demokratie, finally, serves as an important foundation for discussing the
practice of social democracy in five countries.
The reader Foundations of Social Democracy will be the first of a series. Readers
will also be published for the other seminar modules of the Academy for Social
Democracy.
4
Here we would like to thank Tobias Gombert and Martin Timpe. Tobias Gombert
wrote the bulk of the Reader, with the assistance of Martin Timpe at various
points. In addition, they have performed the editorial duties with extraordinary
skill and expertise. It was possible to publish the volume in such a short time only
because of their commitment and application. They and all the other authors
involved deserve our thanks for their outstanding cooperation.
5
FOREWORD to the International Edition
What are the differences between social democracy, liberalism and conservatism?
The search for socio-political ideal models and their discussion is more urgent
than ever in a period of global economic and financial crisis. The consequences
of market failure have seldom been so obvious and the calls for an active and
effective state so strong as they are today. The collapse of Lehman Brothers and
its consequences have not only brought the largest national economies in the
world to their knees, but have also put to the test many political principles and
dogmas which not so long ago were deemed self-evident. Centuries-old fun-
damental questions facing democratic polities have suddenly become topical
again: How can social justice be achieved in an age of globalisation? How can
the tension be resolved between self-interest and solidarity in today’s societies?
What is the meaning of freedom and equality in the face of current socio-political
realities? And what is the role of the state in implementing these principles?
6
Most of the examples used in the Readers reflect politics and society in Germany
or in other OECD countries. Nevertheless, they illustrate political ideal models
and courses of action which also have relevance in other socio-political contexts.
Underlying the international work of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung is the conviction
that the core values and ideals of social democracy know no borders, whether
geographical, cultural or linguistic.
I therefore wish the international edition of the Social Democracy Readers a large
and committed readership.
Christiane Kesper
Director
Division for International Cooperation
7
1. WHAT IS SOCIAL DEMOCRACY?
What is social ‘Social democracy – isn’t that self-explanatory? The idea that it is inherent in the
democracy? very notion of democracy that it should serve every member of society and on
Four answers the basis of equality – isn’t that self-evident?’, some would say.
‘Social democracy – don’t we already have it in Germany with our model of the
social market economy’, others ask.
‘Social democracy – that really belongs to the SPD and therefore it concerns only
social democrats; it is their theory’, according to some.
‘Social democracy – why not democratic socialism? Isn’t that the traditional
meaning?’, others say.
But who is right? At this point, if not before, the debate becomes confused. But who is right? The
shadow of the Tower of Babel looms and progress begins to look daunting.
Some concern its foundations and premises: that is to say, what can be – legiti-
mately – expected of social democracy.
Others address the question of what has already been done; in other words, the
empirical examination of existing society.
A third group, by contrast, asks who are the representatives of social democracy
in society. This question is of particular importance.
Finally, there are those who wonder what benefit there is in diverging from an
already established idea. The question is, therefore, what constitutes the core
of social democracy and how it differs from other standpoints.
8
Anyone wanting to talk about social democracy, therefore, must first make clear We need a definition
exactly what they mean by it and what audience they are addressing. Social
democracy does not have a fixed meaning. It is elusive and people associate a
whole range of values with it. The idea is socially charged because it operates
socially and is claimed – or rejected – by various interest groups.
The four questions show that, before using it, one has to define one’s terms pre-
cisely and be fully aware of what social goals are associated with it.
The idea of ‘social democracy’ is used in many different ways in the theoretical Definitions of
debate. There is no single, binding definition. social democracy
But what are the consequences of there being such a range of definitions? In
the context of an academic discussion the conceptual foundations and their
explanations would have to be compared; the grounds they furnish for estab-
lishing concepts would have to be examined; and the empirical results would
have to be reconciled. It would have to be investigated whether the definitions
were consistent, whether there were conflicting empirical data and whether the
sources had been correctly interpreted.
In the academic sphere these are important questions, to be sure. For those Practical action
who are not engaged in that sphere, however, but who – in their free time – are
socially or politically active, there is usually no time to enter too deeply into the
theoretical side. Without entirely neglecting technical definitions and explana-
tions, where do we go from here?
This volume cannot solve this problem; but it can serve as an entry point to the Different
debate. To that end, various political and theoretical approaches will be outlined. approaches
One must find one’s own bearings – this book cannot and indeed should not
circumvent that, but rather provide a source of inspiration.
9
The following points of reference arise from the opening questions:
• a normative one, which seeks the principles and core values of social
democracy;
• a theoretical one, which is concerned with the theory of social democracy;
and
• an empirical one, which analyses in detail the implementation of social
democracy in a number of countries.
The theoretical The normative level will be addressed in the next two chapters (Chapters 2 and 3),
level: Thomas which examine in detail the core values of freedom, justice and solidarity and
Meyer’s Theory of investigate how various models of society (liberalism, conservatism, socialism/
Social Democracy social democracy) imagine putting them into practice.
Chapter 5, which addresses the empirical level with reference to various country
examples, also takes its bearings from Thomas Meyer. As he shows in his book
Praxis der Sozialen Demokratie [Social Democracy in Practice], social democ-
racy can be implemented with very different instruments and also with widely
diverging degrees of success.
10
2. CORE VALUES
In this chapter:
• freedom, equality/justice and solidarity are elucidated as core values of
social democracy;
• the core values are related to politics today from a historical and philosophi-
cal perspective;
• how the political parties represented in the German Parliament understand
the core values;
• the practical significance of the core values with regard to education, health
care, the world of work and higher education is outlined.
‘Liberté, egalité, fraternité!’ This was the battle-cry of the French Revolution; and Freedom! Equality!
these broadly remain the core values of democratic parties today. The formulation Fraternity!
of core values began in the nineteenth century with the rise of the bourgeoisie
and they began to conquer the world at the latest in the mid-twentieth cen-
tury – they came to be the standard by which states and societies were judged.
This is also reflected in the legal foundations of the United Nations. With the UN Human Rights
UN’s two Human Rights Covenants of 1966 the fundamental civic, political, eco- Covenants as a
nomic, social and cultural rights attained the apex of their legitimacy and have foundation
been ratified by almost every country in the world. They constitute something
like a global legal foundation. Fundamental rights are supposed to ensure the
transposition of core values into formal legal claims.
Having said that, it must be emphasised that, in many countries, the fundamental
rights that were collectively agreed upon are not applied and even some signa-
tory states flagrantly contravene human rights.
In many places, it is doubtful that fundamental rights are actually enforced and, Core values and
therefore, that core values really have much purchase. In that case, this ceases to fundamental rights
be merely a theoretical question and is rather a matter for societal negotiation and
of the power relations of societal actors in individual countries and regions.
However, the core values and their implementation in the form of fundamental
rights represent something of a critical benchmark when it comes to setting a politi-
cal course. One must therefore come to terms with these values at the very outset.
11
Core values and general political orientation were discussed with particular inten-
sity in 2007. The two major parties in Germany, the SPD and the CDU, adopted
new party programmes, one of the aims of which was to describe how the core
values are to be defined and applied in politics today.
Core values and Social democracy, too, at the normative level takes its bearings from core values
fundamental and fundamental rights. In terms of their normative claims and the question of
rights as a political whether they can really be implemented they constitute the crucial points of
compass any political compass.
Historically, the definition of the core values – as well as how they relate to one
another – has been subject to constant change since the eighteenth-century
Enlightenment.
Today, broadly speaking, one may start out from the three core values of free-
dom, equality/justice and solidarity.
2.1. Freedom
The roots of Without doubt, freedom is a basic value that is shared by virtually all political
freedom actors. It goes hand in hand with Enlightenment thinking and what German his-
toriography refers to as the ‘bourgeois’ period (roughly 1815–1915). Philosophers
such as John Locke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Immanuel Kant and Karl Marx, as
well as representatives of Critical Theory, have at various historical moments
thought through and described how freedom might be realised.
How is freedom English philosopher John Locke’s definition of freedom has stood the test of time:
to be defined?
12
The natural liberty of man is to be free from any superior power on earth, and
not to be under the will or legislative authority of man, but to have only the
law of nature for his rule. The liberty of man, in society, is to be under no other
legislative power, but that established, by consent, in the commonwealth; nor
under the dominion of any will, or restraint of any law, but what that legislative
shall enact, according to the trust put in it.
(Locke 1977: 213f; Two Treatises of Government, Part I, Chapter 4)
Locke’s point of departure is that each person is entitled to these freedoms by Freedom and
nature – that is, they did not develop in society, but are somehow ‘prior’. natural right
Locke’s core argument has retained its force, with numerous philosophical vari- How can freedom
ations, up to the present day and is a constant point of reference in debates on be guaranteed and
freedom as a core value. Locke remains one of the leading thinkers of liberalism. realised in society?
However, this constantly referenced definition cannot hide the fact that it is
enshrined in a historical text that cannot be properly understood apart from its
13
origins and cannot be applied directly under present-day circumstances. This
also becomes manifest in the question of how freedom can be guaranteed or
realised in society.
Natural equality It is decisive for the historical debate that Locke – and many subsequent philosophers
and equal freedom of the Enlightenment – was opposing the argument that it is possible to justify a
lack of freedom for the majority on the basis of a natural inequality. Natural equal-
ity and, therewith, equal freedom was a revolutionary assertion in an absolutist
society in which kings sought to legitimise their rule as something God-given.
However, Locke did not confine himself to naturally given, equal freedom, but
transposed natural freedom into society by means of a social contract.
Freedom
In the state of nature Given by nature Given by nature The right of ownership
of a thing is acquired by labour
Can be threatened by the
encroachment of others In cases of dispute, the right of
the stronger shall decide
14
It was on the question of how freedom can be realised that John Locke’s theory Rousseau’s critique
was criticised in the eighteenth century. Probably the most important critic was of John Locke’s
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who opposed or expanded on Locke on four central points: concept of freedom
1. A good social contract can come into being only if, in the establishment of
a society, all men renounce all their natural rights in order to get them back
again as civil rights.
2. The social contract of contemporary bourgeois-monarchic societies is not
a good social contract.
3. Lasting ‘freedom’ can be realised only if all political decisions are reached
by all by way of laws. Only then is every person really subject to their1 own
will and thereby free.
4. For Rousseau, however, ‘freedom’ is also bound up with the idea of devel-
opment. Rousseau believed that each person had a ‘faculty that develops
all the others’, which he called ‘perfectibilité’ (Benner/Brüggen 1996: 24).
Such ‘faculties’ are not predetermined, however, but develop in accordance
with the possibilities for learning and living offered by society.
The first point of criticism in particular is, at first sight, surprising. Why should Ideal: A society
one surrender all natural rights, only to receive them back again from society? of free and
Doesn’t that open the door to tyranny? Rousseau’s radical insistence on this point equal persons
is almost shocking. He chose this radical formulation partly because he wanted to
make it clear that no sinecures, no possessions and therefore no social inequali-
ties should be permitted to insinuate their way into society if freedom is to be
achieved by all. His ideal is a society of free and equal persons.
1 In order to avoid gender bias the word ‘their’ is used instead of ‘his’ or ‘her’, unless this is linguistically
impossible. 15
‘Let us join’, he said to them [the poor – author’s note], ‘to guard the weak from
oppression, to restrain the ambitious, and secure to every man the possession
of what belongs to him: let us institute rules of justice and peace, to which all
without exception may be obliged to conform; rules that may in some measure
make amends for the caprices of fortune, by subjecting equally the powerful and
the weak to the observance of reciprocal obligations. Let us, in a word, instead
of turning our forces against ourselves, collect them in a supreme power which
may govern us by wise laws, protect and defend all the members of the associa-
tion, repulse their common enemies, and maintain eternal harmony among us.’
(Rousseau 1997: 215–217 [Discourse on the Origin of Inequality, Part II])
Freedom, we can say with Rousseau, can certainly also be used as a kind of
knock-down argument. This makes it all the more important to carefully examine
protestations of freedom to see whether they really do apply to everyone.
The relationship Rousseau’s third point of criticism concerns another aspect of freedom: namely,
between freedom its relationship with power. While Locke – and before him, to an even greater
and power degree, Thomas Hobbes – assumes that, while legislating is legitimised by the
people, it is not necessarily exercised by it, Rousseau takes a radically democratic
stance. He argues that one is free – that is to say, subject only to one’s own politi-
cal will – only if one is bound by laws in whose making one has participated.
‘A faculty that With his fourth point of criticism Rousseau supplements Locke’s concept of free-
develops all dom on a central issue. He takes the view that human freedom results from the
the others’ fact that human beings are naturally endowed, not only with ‘faculties’, but also
with a faculty to develop other faculties (cf. Benner/Brüggen 1996: 24). Facilitat-
ing the development of personality is therefore a central challenge for a demo-
cratic society.
What are the The question of how far freedom – of the individual in society, but also in rela-
limits of freedom tion to the state – can be taken is the topic of constant debate. Whether wire
in society? tapping is permissible or whether, in an emergency, a defence minister has the
right to order the shooting down of a passenger plane: a whole host of ques-
tions bring the limits of freedom to the fore.
16
Two philosophical responses are frequently cited in relation to the definition of Two answers
the limits of freedom:
‘It is true that, in democracies, the people seem to act as they please; but politi-
cal liberty does not consist in an unlimited freedom. In governments, that is, in
societies directed by laws, liberty can consist only in the power of doing what
we ought to will, and in not being constrained to do what we ought not to will.
We must have continually present to our minds the difference between inde-
pendence and liberty. Liberty is a right of doing whatever the laws permit; and, if
a citizen could do what they forbid, he would be no longer possessed of liberty,
because all his fellow-citizens would have the same power.’
Montesquieu 1992: 212f [The Spirit of the Laws, Book XI])
‘There is only one categorical imperative and it is this: act only according to that
maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal
law!’ (Kant 1995: 51 [Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals])
17
its of freedom, however, is by no Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) is one of the
means sufficient to make freedom most influential German philosophers of the
Enlightenment. His work addressed almost every
accessible to all in society. In other
philosophical issue of his age.
words, it is not merely a matter of
preventing infringements or intru- His most important works include: Kritik der
sions with regard to freedom, but of reinen Vernunft [Critique of Pure Reason] (1781),
extending freedom to those whose Kritik der praktischen Vernunft [Critique of Practi-
cal Reason] (1788), Kritik der Urteilskraft [Critique
freedoms are inhibited. In society,
of Judgement] (1790), Zum ewigen Frieden [On
this can be realised only in the form
Perpetual Peace] (1795), Metaphysik der Sitten
of equal freedom for all. The SPD’s [The Metaphysics of Morals] (1796/97).
Hamburg Programme states this
concisely: ‘Every person is capable
and competent for freedom. But whether a person is able to live a life commen-
surate with this vocation depends upon society.’
More recent theories – for example, that of Indian Nobel prize winning econo-
mist Amartya Sen – therefore also talk about ‘capabilities’, which go far beyond
fiscal equality to require extensive
participation in the life of society.2 ‘Freedom’ in the SPD’s Hamburg
Programme
Freedom and The upshot of the debate on free- ‘Freedom means the possibility of self-
social democracy dom for social democracy, there- determination. Every person is capable
fore, can be expressed in terms of and competent for freedom. But whether
a number of standards that it has a person is able to live a life commensurate
to meet. with this vocation depends upon society.
Every person must be free of degrading
dependencies, need and fear, and have
the opportunity to develop their capa-
bilities and participate responsibly in soci-
ety and politics. [But] people can exercise
their freedom only if they are secure in
the knowledge that they enjoy adequate
social protection.’
(Hamburger Programm 2007: 15)
2 The first two German government reports on poverty and wealth, accordingly, no longer use only a mate-
rial indicator to measure poverty, but also take in social inclusion and exclusion.
18
Standards to be met by social democracy arising from the debate on
freedom
• Personal freedom and freedom to play an active part in society and its deci-
sion-making must be fundamentally ensured and guaranteed.
• Freedom presupposes that every person is able to live that freedom. This
requires social measures and institutions that make this possible. The formal
establishment of freedom as a fundamental right does not suffice.
• Freedom presupposes that people act responsibly and rationally. This is the
task of education in a democratic society.
2.2. Equality/Justice
Many people find themselves in a quandary when it comes to the second core Equality or justice?
value. Is it ‘equality’ or ‘justice’?
Just
society
Figure 2
Fi 2: JJustt society
i t and
d core values
l
Historically, since the French Revolution the three core values have been ‘free-
dom, equality and solidarity’ (‘liberté, egalité et fraternité’). From a philosophi-
cal perspective, therefore, one could talk of a ‘just society’ if these core values
were realised.
19
Difference between At the same time, the debate on the core value of ‘equality’ gives rise to the
the philosophical question of what a just distribution of material and non-material goods would
concept and be. As a result, since the 1980s ‘justice’ has increasingly been asserted as a core
contemporary value, either distinct from the concept of ‘equality’ or to make it more precise. In
political usage the meantime, it has become established usage to talk of ‘freedom, justice and
solidarity’. Nevertheless, the philosophical debate is worth looking at. In contrast
to the concept of ‘freedom’, which can be ascribed to every individual, ‘equality’
and ‘justice’ are relative concepts: they relate each person and their individual
freedom to the other members of society.
Equality and justice Speaking philosophically, ‘justice’ is the higher concept. In the following passage,
as relative concepts the author tries to define the concept of ‘justice’ more precisely:
‘What is justice? Can one even ask the question? “What”-questions ask about
what a thing is. Justice is not a thing. Justice is a relationship category. It concerns
relations between people. Relationships of a certain kind are described as just.
Consequently, the question should not be “what is justice?”, but “what is justice
about?” … The topic of justice is how the individual stands in relation to the com-
munities of which they are a part, in society, and in relation to other persons with
whom they have dealings. … People feel the need to determine their position in
relation to others with whom they come into contact, and to find out how they
are perceived, how they are valued. … If an individual’s self-esteem corresponds
to how they are judged by others, they feel that they are being treated justly. Such
judgement finds expression in the distribution, denial or withdrawal of material
and non-material [ideelle] goods.’ (Heinrichs 2002: 207 f.)
20
Only when these two conditions are met can we speak of ‘justice’. Equality, The concepts
however, is a particular form of the distribution of material and non-material of equality and
goods. justice must be
defined carefully
‘Equality is the point of departure, not the result [of a social] order. In matters of
distribution, a basic norm is required in relation to which the justice of any devi-
ating distribution can be judged. This primary norm of distribution is numerical
equality – the division of the resources to be distributed by the number of those
who have to be taken into account. In contrast to justice, equality requires no
criteria. … When there are no criteria for the distribution of goods in a given
case, when there are no grounds on which more should be given to one than to
another, in order to avoid proceeding arbitrarily the same must be given to all.’
(Heinrichs 2002: 211 f.)
The demand for equality, therefore, requires that there are no socially acceptable
arguments that could legitimise discrimination in the distribution of goods.
Up to this point, the concepts of ‘equality’ and ‘justice’ can be defined without dif- The problem:
ferent theories coming into conflict. However, the question arises of how ‘unequal How can ‘just
distribution’ can be theoretically justified. There have been many attempts at this discrimination’
kind of justification and definition. Of course, we do not have room to look at be justified?
them all. Anyone with an interest in politics, however, will naturally inquire how a
proposed policy can be judged just or unjust in political practice.
In the following section, four different approaches to the concept of justice will be
presented, all debated in both the theoretical and the political arena since the 1980s
or 1990s. It is clear from the different definitions and approaches that a rationale
for justice is not easy to find and that it is a topic of political controversy.
21
2.2.1. John Rawls’s A Theory of Justice 3
The establishment of In his theory, Rawls analyses the regulation of conflicts of interest in society,
a ‘just basic order’ whose members must try to distribute relatively scarce goods by cooperation. For
this purpose, the opposing interests are set in what one might call a ‘just basic
order’, with specific institutions (constitution, economic and political framework
and so on). In his theory, Rawls wants to bring out these implicit assumptions
of a just order and principles.
A thought Like John Locke, Rawls assumes an initial condition for this purpose. However,
experiment: The he refers not to a state of nature imagined as real, but rather a hypothetical situ-
‘original position’ of ation in which free and equal people, pursuing only their own interests, come
free, equal and goal- together to reach agreement on the principles of justice.
oriented individuals
3 It is beyond the scope of the present discussion to present John Rawls’s theory in its entirety. The aim is rather
to discuss the practical problems with the definition of justice, which may also arise in political practice.
22
According to Rawls, that basic order and those procedures are just on which
the members of a community (or society) could reach a consensus under fair
conditions.
Another aspect of the thought experiment is that individuals do not know what The ‘maximin’ rule
their position in society is. As a consequence, according to Rawls, everyone must
have an interest in ensuring that the position of the least well-off is maximised
(‘maximin’ rule).
It is necessary to take a closer look at the two fundamental principles underly- Two principles
ing Rawls’s wide-ranging theory in order to be able to say whether something of justice
is just or not.
One of Rawls’s most important contributions is his development of the classical A new definition of
liberal debate beyond the redistribution of social goods to a theory that redefines just distribution
just distribution. In this way, Rawls linked the liberal tradition, which involves
the claim to and safeguarding of civil rights and liberties, to social democratic
ideas of equality and justice.
23
Two central In his A Theory of Justice, Rawls formulates two principles:
principles
Principle 1
‘Each person is to have an equal right to the most extensive total system
of equal basic liberties compatible with a similar system of liberty for all.’
(Rawls 1979: 81)4
Principle 2
‘Social and economic inequalities are to be arranged so that they are both: (a)
to the greatest benefit of the least advantaged (consistent with a just savings
principle); and (b) attached to offices and positions open to all under conditions
of fair equality of opportunity.’ (Rawls 1979: 336)
Basic freedoms The first principle refers to a whole arsenal of basic freedoms that must exist for
everyone so that they can exercise their freedoms. The reference to a ‘similar
system’ makes it clear that every form of conduct can be abstracted from con-
crete individuals. In concrete terms, one can therefore talk of ‘equality before
the law’ and guaranteed personality rights. The first principle is recognised by
almost everyone in the literature.
Rawls assumes – in the liberal tradition – that the first principle must take abso-
lute priority over the second.5
The difference In contrast to the broadly uncontroversial first principle, the second – the so-
principle called ‘difference principle’ – is rather more difficult. Here Rawls proposes an
abstract norm in accordance with which discrimination can be adjudged fair. An
unequal distribution can be justified if it meets two conditions:
4 This formulation is synonymous with one already formulated by Kant: ‘Every action is just which in itself,
or in the maxim on which it proceeds, is such that it can coexist along with the freedom of the will of each
and all in action, according to a universal law.“ (Kant 1963: 33)
5 This proves to be problematic, both practically and logically, as Meyer makes clear (see pp. 88).
24
Rawls formulates the first condition for ‘just unequal distribution’ in terms of Conditions for a ‘just
the expected consequences of that unequal distribution: if everyone will ben- unequal distribution’
efit from it, including the weakest in society, then an unequal distribution (in its
subsequent effects) can be classified as just. The effect in question is, therefore,
temporally delayed.
The second condition refers to fair access. Only if access to ‘offices and positions’
is, in principle, open to everyone can unequal distribution be justified. More suc-
cinctly: ‘all should have a fair chance’.
The difference principle is extremely controversial, not just philosophically but A practical example
also politically. Before one can ask whether or not it is an adequate definition of
justice, however, one has to apply it to practical examples. In the box, a number
of political arguments are presented which you should evaluate and decide
whether or not they are ‘just’ in accordance with Rawls’s two principles.6 The
best approach is first to consider what you instinctively regard as just.
Question
How just are the two models when considered ithin the Rawlsian framework?
6 By the way, one would be misinterpreting Rawls if one were to examine unequal treatment solely on the basis
of the difference principle. Rawls assumes that justice is conditional upon both principles together.
25
2.2.2. The Socialist Critique
of Liberal Concepts of Justice
‘It is the exclusive realm of freedom, equality, property … Freedom, because
both buyer and seller of a commodity, let us say of labour power, are determined
only by their own free will. They contract as free persons, who are equal before
the law … Equality, because each enters into relation with the other, and they
exchange equivalent for equivalent. Property, because each disposes only of
what is his own.’ (Marx, Capital, Volume I)
The social reality Justice and equality as presented so far – in the definitions of Heinrichs and
Rawls – are defined and differentiated in accordance with their philosophical
contents.7 They refer, therefore, to concepts, not to social reality. For the pur-
pose of definition, it is irrelevant whether or not justice is regarded as having
been realised in a given society.
However, that core values have real effects in society is naturally a fundamental
demand. Socialist concepts of justice turn on this very claim.
How can the Socialist concepts of justice generally start out from the position that one must
predominance be able to explain the prevalent inequality and injustice. It is plain to see from
of inequality and statistics on poverty and wealth that society will not give rise to equality or just
injustice in society distribution of its own accord. Inequality and injustice, therefore, are not merely
be explained? accidental or the outcome of a one-off disequilibrium, but rather a systemic
problem afflicting society. The main cause – although certainly not the only
one – of inequality and injustice was identified as conditions of production in
capitalist market economies.
Over the past 150 years, therefore, socialist arguments have been constructed on
two pillars. On the one hand, they demand a redistribution of society’s wealth
and, on the other hand, they demand that the way in which goods are produced
and acquired be fundamentally changed, so that freedom for everyone can be
realised. The basic idea is that equality must be made real in order to guarantee
freedom for all.
7 To be sure, Heinrichs does not have any liberal theory in mind, but primarily the social-philosophical back-
ground of radical philosophy.
26
Rawls contradicted this in his approach, asserting that, generally speaking, the
worst off would benefit most in the social market economy.
Socialist approaches dispute Rawls’s premise that economic inequality can be to Can inequality result
the benefit of all (and, above all, those who are worst off). Instead, they assume in benefits for all?
the intensification of inequality and injustice. Recent empirical studies appear
to bear them out.8
This split on the political left also manifests itself in theoretical terms. In the
debate on justice, two different models in particular stand toe to toe: on the
one hand, justice in the distribution of social and material goods and, on the
other hand, justice with regard to access, or the question of whether and how
particular social groups are recognised and have access to various social posi-
tions (in other words, social status). This debate is taking place not only on the
theoretical, but also on the political level. Furthermore, this adversarial stand-
off between distributive justice, on the one hand, and justice of access, on the
other hand, is largely the result of preconceptions on both sides.
In particular, theorists who set great store by justice of access do not close their Distributive justice
eyes to redistribution in principle. Rather, what is at stake are more complex vs. justice of access
concepts of justice that apprehend economic inequality as a problem of justice.
This dispute is also significant because it might imply a division of the workers,
a target group which is of particular importance for social democracy. At the
moment, this target group – as earlier in its history – is polarised, not least in
relation to this question of freedom and equality.
8 See, for example, the following studies: Bourdieu et al. 1997; Castel 2000; Schultheis/Schulz 2005.
27
2.2.3. Nancy Fraser’s Two-dimensional
Concept of Justice
A two-dimensional In her conception of justice, Nancy Fraser tries to mitigate the conflict between
concept of justice distributive justice/redistribution and justice of access or the liberal approach,
and proposes a two-dimensional concept of justice:
Fraser’s thesis here is that every injustice or disadvantage includes both eco-
nomic disadvantage and a lack of recognition, although to be sure in quite spe-
cific proportions:
Justice
Culture of recognition
Question of social status
Economic dimension
‘Economic inequality’
Practical examples To take an example, discrimination against homosexuals takes place primarily in
the realm of status and the respect of society. At the same time, it is inextricably
linked to the financial handicap imposed by the taxation of registered life part-
nerships. ‘Justice’ can be achieved here, therefore, only if the specific constel-
lation comprising disadvantages both in status and in the economic dimension
is taken into account.
28
As a second example, take the stig- Justice requires
Nancy Fraser (geb. 1947) is Professor of Politi-
matisation and exclusion of the a multi-dimen-
cal and Social Science at the New School for Social
Research in New York. She is one of the most
unemployed in our society. While sional strategy
Fraser goes on to describe, therefore, an analytical procedure for the investi- The idea of ‘parity
gation of discrimination or injustice. However, she does formulate normatively of participation’
what justice, in her opinion, should be. She understands justice as ‘parity of
participation’:
At this point, Fraser – like Rawls – must specify the criterion in accordance with Criterion
which she wishes to establish or rule out just or unjust discrimination in the two for (un)just
dimensions. She proposes the following: discrimination
29
‘Thus, for both dimensions the same general criterion serves to distinguish war-
ranted from unwarranted claims. Whether the issue is distribution or recognition,
claimants must show that current conditions prevent them from participating
on a par with others in social life.’
(Fraser 2003: 57 f.)
Te st pro ce dure
These test steps (analysis on the basis of both dimensions with reference to con-
crete instances of injustice, application and alternatives), according to Fraser, are
primarily a matter of democratic bargaining and negotiation.
A practical or field test also makes sense here. For example, the discussion of
universal (or ‘citizens’’) health insurance versus flat rate insurance (see below)
can be adduced.
Two strategies for Fraser discusses two social strategies to combat injustice (Fraser 2003: 102f):
implementing justice affirmation and transformation. For example, the liberal welfare state represents
an affirmative strategy to ameliorate the economic downside of the free market
economy. Although the economic discrimination between capital and labour is
not abolished, it is moderated.
Starting point: Fraser rejects both strategies, introducing a third strategy, which she (after André
‘nonreformist Gorz) calls ‘nonreformist reform’. She links this clumsy and not easily understand-
reform’ able concept with a social democratic project:
30
‘In the Fordist period, [this strategy] informed some left-wing understandings of
social democracy. From this perspective, social democracy was not seen as a simple
compromise between an affirmative liberal welfare state, on the one hand, and a
transformative socialist one, on the other. Rather it was viewed as a dynamic regime
whose trajectory would be transformative over time. The idea was to institute an
initial set of apparently affirmative redistributive reforms, including universalist social-
welfare entitlements, steeply progressive taxation, macroeconomic policies aimed
at creating full employment, a large non-market public sector, and significant public
and/or collective ownership. Although none of these policies altered the structure
of the capitalist society per se, the expectation was that together they would shift
the balance of power from capital to labor and encourage transformation in the
long term. That expectation is arguable, to be sure. In the event, it was never fully
tested, as neoliberalism effectively put an end to the experiment.’ (Fraser 2003: 110 f.)
In the political debate, however, two other concepts of justice have become
established that are aimed at justifying and legitimising the distribution of goods
from different viewpoints.
31
Achievement- Another way of expressing the idea of achievement-based justice is the slogan
based justice ‘achievement must be rewarded again’. The traditional constituency of the FDP
and the CDU/CSU generally take the view that achievement – or merit – legiti-
mises being better off in terms of the distribution of goods. Achievement-based
justice thereby assumes that distributive justice can be measured in terms of the
achievements or merit (Leistung) of the individual.
One example of this is the income threshold with regard to health insurance.
Above a certain annual income it is possible to choose a private health insurance
scheme (and so, as a rule, better treatment if one becomes ill). Many of those on
the left are uncomfortable with this or even oppose it outright.
Needs-based justice Needs-based justice: Needs-based justice is concerned with what benefits differ-
ent persons should receive because their social situation requires it. For example,
a person in need might require some sort of care. Healthy persons cannot claim
this benefit because they do not have this particular need or their need is not
socially recognised. Most social transfers in accordance with the Social Code
have a needs-based orientation. Needs-based justice, therefore, has a place in
our social system as a principle of legitimation.
Both lines of argument turn up again and again in the political debate.
32
2.2.5. Digression: Equality and Justice
as Social Democratic Concepts
Alongside these philosophical approaches to the concept of justice the historical Shift of emphasis in
development of key political concepts within social democracy since the founding the justice debate
of the Federal Republic is also interesting. A shift of emphasis can be detected
in the political debate on justice, which, although it came about independently
of the theoretical debate, has definitely been influenced by it.
At this point we shall examine the policy theses of social democracy, among
other reasons because social justice has always played a special role in the pro-
grammatic discussions of the Social Democrats.
In particular up to 1959, when the Social Democratic Party in Germany, in the Equality
wake of its party conference in Bad Godesberg, was able to reach out to new
sectors of the electorate, the call for equality was still identified entirely with
left-wing politics. It applied to every area of life, but the world of work was of
central importance. Equality was linked primarily to surmounting lack of freedom
and exploitation in terms of the relations of production. From codetermination
in the coal and steel industries up to the strike wave of the 1950s – events that
have almost faded from memory today – the goal was to attain more equality,
in other words, more codetermination with regard to working and living condi-
tions. The results were mixed: although there were partial successes in terms of
codetermination in the workplace and at enterprise level, the demand for equal-
ity in working life was not fulfilled over the long term.
In the Brandt era and under the so-called ‘social–liberal coalition’ (SPD/FDP), the Equality of
notion of ‘equality of opportunity’ was coined, which has considerable resonance opportunity
even today (and not only among Social Democrats) and characterised progressive
politics, especially in the Brandt era. The new concept tended to accept existing
social inequality and focused instead on education policy. The expansion of edu-
33
cation and the state sector became the principal means of reaching out to new
sectors of society and portions of the electorate, and inequality was conceived
not only in terms of material distribution, but also in terms of the distribution of
educational opportunities in society. For Social Democrats, it went without saying
that the unequal distribution of material resources and the unequal distribution
of educational opportunities go hand in hand. For the Liberals, however, the
emphasis was less on connecting the ideas of equality and equality of oppor-
tunity and more on wanting to substitute equality by equality of opportunity.
Equality of opportunity was something that Liberals could latch onto; otherwise,
a social–liberal coalition would not have been possible.
The new focus was the sign of a new social configuration and a realignment
of politics. The notion of equality of opportunity was strongly characteristic of
this, being introduced during a period in which the welfare state was viewed
positively and was able to stabilise the economic situation.
Equitable In the third period of Social Democratic government, under Chancellor Gerhard
opportunity Schröder, the concept of equality of opportunity was supplemented by what
might be termed ‘equitable opportunity’. ‘Equitable opportunity’ puts more
emphasis on the distributive aspect. The concept makes the point that oppor-
tunities in society are linked to the distribution of material and non-material
resources. These resources, in turn, are – and this was a defining contention of
this government – limited in economic terms.
The definition The very definition of equitable opportunity in political debate divides the Left.
of equitable The critical issues are as follows:
opportunity has
split the Left • Are resources really in such short supply, and if so to what extent? Or is it
rather a question of political will, in which case different choices could be
made with regard to public finances and social security?
• Can the current social distribution of burdens and relief be called fair (for
example, relieving the burden on business, while making cuts in the social
safety net)?
34
Regardless of how one answers these questions, it is clear that the notion of Justice and social
justice is highly controversial, in both the theoretical and the political realms. democracy
35
2.3. Solidarity
Definition of The least discussed concept is that of ‘solidarity’ (or ‘fraternité’ in the French Revo-
solidarity lution). Undoubtedly, this is because solidarity concerns our common humanity
and therefore is more difficult to integrate in a theoretical framework. Solidarity
can be roughly defined, with reference to a number of authors,9 as:
Connection ‘Solidarity’ is therefore a question of common ‘social identity’, which has its
between solidarity source in a similar mode of life and common values.
and social identity
Having said that, American sociologist and moral philosopher Michael Walzer
points out, with some justification, that solidarity ‘can be dangerous when it
is only a feeling, an emotional substitute for, rather than a reflection of, actual
on-the-ground, day-by-day cooperation’ (Walzer 1997: 32).
Solidarity as the This ‘day-by-day cooperation’ refers to social institutions and structures within
concept of day-by- the framework of which solidarity can develop and contribute to social security.
day cooperation?
Taken by itself, solidarity can certainly take an exclusive and discriminatory
form – the ‘esprit de corps’ of right-wing extremists is one example of this. For
a democratic society, which develops out of and in tandem with an open and
pluralistic civil society, this false form of solidarity represents an enormous and
persistently underestimated danger. The fatal threshold is passed when social
cohesion is nourished by discrimination against others.
Solidarity needs We cannot talk about solidarity, therefore, without discussing the realisation of
equality and freedom and equality in a democratic society.
freedom
36
As difficult as it is to get to grips with this concept, it has nevertheless played a
substantial role in social history in terms of societal embedding or institutionali-
sation. For example, the great social insurance schemes (unemployment, sick-
ness, pension and accident insurance) are solidaristic institutions of the labour
force. Their founding in the 1890s or 1920s must be attributed above all to the
immense pressure exerted by workers and socialists/Social Democrats, even
under Bismarck’s conservative government.
37
2.4. Other Points of View
Martin Timpe
Naturally, the core values of social democracy are not the only ones on the political
scene. The other parties have also formulated – in party programmes or similar
foundational documents – their core values. We shall now take a brief look at
these formulations. We make no claim to completeness and our aim is rather to
provide a sweeping overview without getting bogged down in the detail.
At least to some extent it can be seen that the CDU’s concept of freedom differs
somewhat from that of the SPD. First of all, the CDU formulates the concept of
freedom in more detail than the other two core values. Indeed, the genesis of
this party programme was entitled ‘A new justice through more freedom’. Both
could indicate a prioritisation of the core value of freedom, but the SPD insists
that the core values have equal status. Apart from that, in the CDU programme
the emphasis is rather on the defensive or negative civil rights and liberties than
on the empowering, positive ones.
The three core values of the FDP: Freedom, freedom and freedom
Freedom, freedom, The FDP does not have a party programme. However, a glance at similar foun-
freedom dational documents, such as the Wiesbaden Declaration of Basic Principles,
adopted at the party’s Federal caucus in 1997, makes clear in no uncertain terms
the party’s one-sided orientation towards the core value of freedom. This is per-
fectly understandable for a party that identifies its roots in political liberalism,
38
one might think. However, it might be objected that it is a rather abridged ver-
sion. For example, it would not be unreasonable to assert that various aspects of
justice played a central role in John Locke’s ideas on society, one of the founding
fathers of political liberalism. In contrast, the FDP seeks to relate every aspect of
its fundamental orientation to the concept of freedom. Slogans such as ‘Free-
dom means progress’ or ‘Freedom means compatibility with the future’ show
how artificially Free Democrats try to establish a reference to a core value whose
importance is beyond dispute. It is also clear, however, that a society which sets
its sights exclusively on freedom, at the expense of justice and solidaristic coop-
eration, would soon run into trouble and social cohesion come under threat.
39
2.5. Core Values in Practice
STUDIES Having explored the core values on the theoretical level, we would now like to
look at them in action. What roles are played by core values for social democracy
in everyday political debate?
A series of examples from different spheres should generate ideas and stimu-
late further reflection.
Marc Herter
Since the first PISA studies revealed the deficiencies of the German education
system in 2003 the education system has been discussed intensively at national,
state (Land) and local level. Central to the debate is the fact that, in Germany,
educational outcomes – especially in comparison with other countries – are
quite closely related to the social backgrounds of children and young people.
C ASE
However, what would a socially just and solidaristic school system, which at the
same time gave everyone the freedom to make their own decisions concerning
education and occupation, look like?
In Hamm, the SPD took up this question and developed an integrated social
democratic approach in the form of the so-called ‘Master plan: Schools create
opportunities for the future’. As a town that is an administrative district in its
own right (kreisfreie Stadt) Hamm runs its own schools and so is responsible for
schools’ ‘future-oriented development’. Why, then, a ‘master plan’?
10 On education, see also: Reader 3: Welfare State and Social Democracy (2012), chapter 7.5 Education.
11 This example is based on a schools development plan worked out by the SPD in Hamm.
40
registrations at a school are too high or too low, the school is expanded, pupil
numbers are frozen or pupils are transferred until balance is restored. When that
crisis is over, one waits until the next one arises.
C ASE
This is not a sound basis for a future-oriented local school system.
Another starting point for a new schools concept was the realisation that not
only the school system, but also the various interfaces with child and youth wel-
fare, as well as support with regard to training and education, the labour market
and integration, have a decisive role in the educational outcomes of children
and young people. Based on an in-depth analysis, the Master Plan formulates
long-term goals and spheres of action, key to which is the improvement of edu-
cational participation and results
STUDIES
provision is managed by the incumbent town hall majority. Two indicators of the
failure of previous schools policy, besides the ubiquitous PISA studies, clearly
demonstrate how important this is:
41
What We Mean by Freedom – All-day Care Not Only for the Few
The Master Plan’s first guiding principle is the expansion of all-day care across the
STUDIES board. Quality care from the age of one begins with high-quality provision that
effectively meets needs for the under-threes, extending to timely and pedagogi-
cally challenging care for three- to six-year-olds, followed, when children reach
school age, by so-called ‘open all-day’ care, which is not limited to primary school
but extends up to the child’s 14th year. In this way, reconciliation of work and fam-
ily life is made possible. Furthermore, the town council does not pretend to lay
down whether and how children are raised, but provides the framework within
which mothers and fathers are free for the first time to make their own decisions.
In this way, freedom is not the preserve of better-off families, who are in a position
to employ a nanny, but belongs to all families, enabling them to plan their lives.
District comprehensive schools (on the North Rhine Westphalia SPD model),
therefore, after continuing with mixed classes in the fifth and sixth years, would
provide the option of further integrated classes up to the tenth year and splitting
up into three streams corresponding to the Hauptschule (like the old secondary
modern in the UK), the Realschule (middle schools with an orientation towards
more practical subjects) and Gymnasium (grammar school), but all within the
same building and as one school. A great deal would change at local level, too:
for example, district comprehensive schools would introduce gymnasium and
vocational education into the abovementioned Herringen district for the first
time. Three other districts would also be endowed with their first ‘grammar-
school’ education. By and large, due to demographic change, virtually no district
will be in a position to sustain existing provision without some form of compre-
hensive education.
42
Solidarity That Is More than Empty Words –
Social Support Budget
The third major element of the schools policy proposals is the social support
C ASE
budget. This takes into account the fact that special needs and circumstances
are quite different in different schools.
STUDIES
needs and consequently would be able to use the school budget proper in the
same way as other schools. This differs fundamentally from the traditional per
capita budgeting. It calls for solidarity between financially robust schools and
financially fragile ones in order to equalise funding possibilities throughout the
town and so facilitate successful educational outcomes.
Dialogue
After the joint development of the Plan by the subdistrict and council coalition
party this is being presented to and discussed with parents, teachers, students
and other interested parties at events in all seven districts. The central issue is
whether these ideas can be applied in the relevant district.
43
2.5.2. Health Care Policy 12
In Germany, the question of health care financing has dominated the public
debate. In particular on the revenue side two very different policies confront
one another: the CDU’s »flat-rate contributions« and the SPD’s »universal health
insurance«.
How are the two models – »universal health insurance« and »flat-rate contribu-
tions« – to be evaluated with regard to the core values of social democracy? To
answer that, we must first take a closer look at the two models and the particu-
lar features of private health insurance (PKV).
Flat-rate insurance
The model described by the CDU itself as a ‘health premium’ is composed of a
monthly flat-rate payment, which self-evidently is the same for all contributors,
and employers’ contributions, fixed at 6.5 per cent of income subject to contri-
12 On health care, see also: Reader 3: Welfare State and Social Democracy (2012), chapter 7.4 Health Care.
44
butions. Employers would thus be spared future cost increases. Those for whom
the flat-rate contribution represents more than 7 per cent of their income would
be compensated. The contributions of the children of those covered by statutory
C ASE
health insurance will in future be tax-financed.
STUDIES
Private health insurance would be affected in different ways, depending on
whether universal health insurance or flat-rate health insurance was introduced.
While one of the aims of universal health insurance is to include private health
insurance in solidaristic financing, a flat-rate system would leave private privi-
leges untouched. Indeed, tax revenues would be used to finance the freedom
from contribution liability of the children of the privately insured.
The CDU claims that its model is also solidaristic in nature. They can point to the
fact that the flat-rate system includes a larger contribution from the tax system.
However, this is problematic in two respects.
First, it is not clear how large this »fiscal compensation« can be if the CDU and the
FDP further weaken the viability of the state through tax cuts for higher earners.
45
Second, the possibility of solidaristic compensation via the tax system requires
that the latter be organised on a solidaristic basis. The plans of the CDU and
STUDIES the FDP preclude that. The coalition agreement envisages doing away with the
principle that strong shoulders should bear more than weak ones, as embodied
in progressive taxation.
In any case, what is definitely not solidaristic is the fact that, under the flat-rate
model, civil servants would remain exempt and private health insurance (at least
formally) would retain its traditional competitive structures.
The introduction of universal health insurance will not mean less freedom of
choice, however. It would merely mean that the coexistence of different bases of
calculation applied by individual insurers would be brought to an end. Instead,
‘fair competition’ would be created by means of binding provisions establish-
ing a uniform system.
universal health insurance model would reduce the burden on families with two
children, with the introduction of a flat-rate system they would stand to lose up
to 900 euros a year. The situation of single persons is the exact opposite: under
a flat-rate system they might hope to gain more than 1,300 euros a year, while
under a universal system their gains would be more modest.
As already stated, health is the basis of a decent life and all must have equal
access to it. A health care system, besides being fit for purpose, should be ori-
ented primarily towards equal opportunities (access to health services) and
needs-based justice.
46
2.5.3. Labour Market Policy 13
C ASE
and Social Democratic Values
Matthias Neis
For many decades after the end of the Second World War a successful com-
promise was largely maintained between the interests of capital and labour in
Germany. During an extraordinarily long period of economic growth from 1949
wage labour was the norm. Employment also gave people a positive right to
‘social property’, guaranteeing a pension entitlement, protection against wrong-
ful dismissal and maintenance of health and safety standards, codetermination
rights and binding wage agreements (Dörre 2005).
Wage labour of this kind – also known as the so-called ‘typical employment
relationship’ or ‘standard employment contract’ and underwritten by the wel-
STUDIES
fare state – bestowed a minimum level of recognition or social status alongside
material security.
This, in retrospect, frankly harmonious period was, of course, far from conflict-free.
The compromise was constantly contested, with no holds barred, and the unequal
distribution of society’s wealth was at best only gradually ameliorated. However,
large sections of the population could rest assured that, by virtue of their own
efforts, they would slowly but surely be able to improve their standard of living.
Since the 1980s, however, the standard employment contract has increasingly
lost its shine. Although the majority of employees still work on the basis of ‘typical
employment’, the number is falling rapidly. Employment growth is to be found
only in other areas: part-time work, temporary or agency work, fixed-term or
marginal part-time work (‘mini-jobs’).14 Like permanent and full-time employ-
ment, ‘social property’ is also coming under pressure. The partial privatisation
of old age pensions, proposals to weaken protection against dismissal and the
diminishing implementation of binding collective agreements, particularly in
eastern Germany, are only the most obvious aspects of this process.
13 On labour market policy, see also: Reader 3: Welfare State and Social Democracy, chapter 7.2, Work.
14 Between 1991 and 2003, the number of part-time workers, for example, grew from around 5 million
to over 9 million.
47
A number of reasons can be cited for these developments. For example, the
growing importance of service and IT work calls for a different, more flexible
STUDIES work organisation than the production model of former times. In circumstances
in which competition is no longer only between companies, but also within
them – pitching teams and departments against one another – ‘social property’
is swiftly becoming a form of ‘reserve in support of flexibilisation’. Companies
that manage to water down or even abolish employment protection rights gain
a competitive advantage, although probably only a short-lived one.
Most people are profoundly disturbed by this turn of events. In a study by the
Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung in 2007 63 per cent of respondents reported being wor-
ried by the ongoing changes in society (Neugebauer 2007). This state of affairs,
which is disseminating a generalised uncertainty among large sections of the
population, caused by changes in the economy and the world of work, has been
dubbed ‘precarity’ by French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. This is not merely a
matter of falling wages or fixed-term contracts, but, just as importantly, of how
one experiences and ‘processes’ uncertainty.
When one takes that into consideration, it becomes apparent that precarity is
not confined to those in precarious employment. It is working its way deep into
the heart of the labour economy. Many permanent employees experience the
presence of temporary or agency workers at their workplace as profoundly unset-
tling. Confronted with the dreaded alternative they are prepared to make conces-
C ASE
sions on wages and working conditions, which otherwise they would never have
accepted. Precarious workers find themselves, somewhere between workers on
standard employment contracts and people who have been cast adrift completely
from the world of gainful employment, in a state of suspension. Their fear is that
they will slip down the social ladder; their dream is to move on up into the sphere
of the standard employment contract. All too often, however, the sole realistic
prospect is that of coming to terms with permanent uncertainty.
What are the consequences of these developments for the project of social democ-
racy? The significance of ‘normal employment’ for social democracy in the past can-
not be overestimated. Embedded in the welfare state, it was long one of the main
factors which shaped the three core values. It created security for many – although
not for all – and thereby constituted a necessary precondition for the efficacy of
positive freedoms. Whatever was achieved in terms of significant redistribution (in
48
accordance with the value of justice) was done, to a considerable extent, by means
of the employment system. Ultimately, ‘social property’ was geared to cushioning
the effects of life’s exigencies on the basis of solidarity. Social security, created by
C ASE
normal employment, fostered the identification of large sections of the population
with the three core values of social democracy. In particular, the SPD, in its party
programmes, made strong reference to the standard employment relationship
and, above all, full employment. The aim of extending ‘normal employment’ to
all workers was part and parcel of the Party’s understanding of itself as the politi-
cal standard-bearer of social democracy.
However, this strong association with the standard employment relationship dis-
solved. The labour market and social policy reforms of the past decade, such as the
normalisation of temporary work and the reform of unemployment insurance, for
which the SPD was (co-)responsible, were also an attempt to respond to a radical
change in the world of work with an equally radical change of course. The values
of social democracy still have powerful resonance among the population. How-
STUDIES
ever, unlike previously, these values are no longer self-evidently attached to one
political representative. The main reason for this is the political failure, so far, to
re-establish social security under the aegis of flexibilisation. What does that mean
for a new model of social democracy in relation to the core values that underlie it?
Freedom
The new world of work, to be sure, entails new promises of freedom. A small,
but not negligible group of workers can, as freelancers or ‘self-managers’, ben-
efit from the freedom to organise their own work in the form of projects, not
subject to the direction of ‘bosses’. This group can, in addition, demand a sub-
stantial reward for its flexibility. With sufficient resources, workers in this group
can transform short-term unemployment into an opportunity for further train-
ing. For most precarious workers, without a financial buffer, a similar situation
represents a major catastrophe, which drastically curtails rights of both positive
and negative freedom.
49
Justice
What is fair and who is entitled to make legitimate claims, and to what, remains
STUDIES decisively co-determined by employment status. Historically, one’s willingness
to make an active contribution, as demonstrated by the work one did, entitled
one to participate in society. Even then, this concept of justice delineated sharply
between social groups – for example, between the sexes – and incorporated
tendencies towards the individualisation of responsibility.
These norms have proved to be very stable but in the new labour economy
they have developed into a veritable driver of inequality, within the framework
of which the notion of performance or achievement (merit) persists, but the
possibilities of access to employment are becoming more complicated. Falling
out of the employment system from time to time, or even repeatedly, is quite
normal in the ‘zone’ of precarity. However, that is far from saying that this is
acceptable. Many of those in precarious circumstances are entitled to have
their willingness to work demonstrated in the form of regular employment. It
is suggested by some that failure in this respect means that one just has to try
harder. But this individualisation blurs people’s perceptions of the increasing
inequalities in society. In this way, this understanding of justice can almost be
turned into an antonym of equality.
One challenge that social democracy must meet is to establish a positive rela-
tionship between justice and equality. In political terms, this means allowing
C ASE
individualisation to increase only to the extent that each individual has real scope
for self-determination. Only on this basis is it meaningful to talk of demanding
more self-responsibility
Solidarity
The restructuring of collective insurance systems – the institutional expression
of solidarity in the old employment system – can be understood as one element
of a general crisis affecting solidaristic behaviour. In the current situation, the
main line of contention in society is between the ‘haves’ and the ‘have nots’,
which has also to some extent set the terms in which these systems have been
argued over, overlapping with the division between ‘inside’ and ‘outside’. The
two distinctions are not mutually exclusive, but lead to entirely different social
conflicts.
50
Intense competition in the workplace, combined with the feeling that there
are others eager to take one’s place pressing constantly at the gates, offers the
worst possible incentive to solidaristic behaviour. Those ‘on the inside’ increas-
C ASE
ingly perceive those ‘on the outside’ as a threat. Conversely, those elements of
collective social security that remain intact are frequently experienced by those
in precarious employment or out of work as obstacles which will continue to
shut them out. The current crisis makes it blatantly obvious that this perception
is not without foundation. After a collapse in orders in large parts of industry in
winter 2008 temporary workers lost their jobs almost immediately. Almost from
one day to the next factories laid off hundreds of thousands. Protests by workers
or even trade unions were sporadic at best. However, these redundancies did
secure the jobs of the core workforce and thus the bulk of trade union members.
STUDIES
represent a crucial reference point for the social democracy of the future. It
must re-establish the credibility of ‘social property’. For that purpose, the rel-
evant instruments have to be designed in accordance with the kind of careers
people can expect to have today in order to lessen the contrast between ‘inside’
and ‘outside’.
In the new labour economy, while, on the one hand, the association between the
core values of social democracy and labour can no longer be taken for granted,
as once it could, on the other hand, this association remains all too close, under-
lining the urgency of a new debate on the contents of the three concepts of
freedom, justice and solidarity.
An accurate assessment of the ways in which freedom, justice and solidarity are
related to the new labour economy should be prioritised by the political repre-
sentatives of social democratic ideas. There is nothing to indicate that employ-
ment will ultimately lose its status as an important vehicle of participation and
recognition. The nature of work in society will continue to be a decisive influence
on the character of social democracy. The crisis experience at the end of this
decade shows that, more than ever, the economy and work in a social democ-
racy must be shaped in accordance with democratic principles.
51
2.5.4. Higher Education Policy
STUDIES »Private before State« or Public Good? Two
Contrasting Models of Student Financing
Martin Timpe and Frederike Boll
BAföG
»But there’s also BAföG« (Federal Education and Training Assistance Act – Bun-
desausbildungsförderungsgesetz or BAföG), someone might say. However, only
a small number of students – around 18 per cent – in German institutions of
higher education receive BAföG assistance (see 17. BAföG-Bericht 2007: 8).15
Moreover, the amount the BAföG allows for living costs systematically falls short
15 This is the proportion of all those receiving support out of all students.
52
of actual living costs, since the law does not provide for automatic adjustment.
The 50 per cent loan portion of the BAföG also puts off many potential students.
In non-graduate families people’s willingness to incur debt is much lower than
C ASE
in graduate families. This also goes against proposals to fund living costs and
tuition fees via loans.
Finally, the income thresholds for BAföG are set so low that many families that
could not afford to put their children through higher education nevertheless
do not receive BAföG support. This has been described as the »middle-income
Catch« (Mittelstandsloch).
Tuition Fees
On top of that, currently six federal states charge tuition fees of up to 500 euros
per semester. After the Constitutional Court decided in 2005 that it was up to
federal states whether to impose higher education charges seven CDU-led state
governments have introduced general tuition fees. In Hessen, however, the fees
STUDIES
were subsequently abolished by the Red-Green-Red (SPD-Alliance 90/Greens-
Die Linke) majority in the state parliament. The Black-Yellow-Green (CDU-FDP-
Greens) state government in Saarland has also decided to abolish tuition fees.
In Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, Hamburg, Lower Saxony and North Rhine-
Westphalia, however, tuition fees remain in place, which means that over half
of Germany’s 2 million or so students are affected by them.
There are therefore two contrasting student financing models: one is based on
increasing private contributions to pay for study and advocates, for example,
tuition fees, and the other demands free education on the grounds that it is
a human right. On this understanding, education is a public good that must
be available to all equally, regardless of income, origin and economic or social
circumstances.
53
to take more account of their ideas about one’s future career and what subject
one should study than one’s own interests.
STUDIES A strong BAföG that depends only on students’ individual needs would be a
good way of actually realising formal freedom (to study). The various proposals
concerning student loans offer only apparent freedom. In fact, they create new
dependencies, in the form of debts and contractual obligations to creditors.
Justice
In debates on tuition fees and justice one hears the same argument time and
time again – but no matter how many times people say it, it does not become
any more correct. Nurses’ taxes pay for the studies of the sons of senior consult-
ants. Senior consultants, in turn, make no contribution to these studies, even
though they could easily afford tuition fees. This situation is deeply unfair and
so well-off families should make a direct contribution to higher education fund-
ing via tuition fees.
The situation described would indeed be unfair. In reality, however, one injustice
is being used to justify another. The absence of equal opportunities in our edu-
cation system and the unequal distribution of the social (tax) burden.
The sons of senior consultants will continue their studies with or without tui-
tion fees. Levying tuition fees would only reinforce the social inequality in
C ASE
Justice is equal freedom – this is what social democrats believe. Equal freedom
to study will at the very least be jeopardised by the levying of tuition fees. At the
same time, even the line of argument we have presented is inconclusive. Rather,
fair distribution of the funding of public provisions should be organised through
the tax system on the basis of ability to pay.
54
Solidarity
Finally, it is worth pausing for a moment to consider the effects of tuition fees
on the social climate. Our institutions of higher education make an important
C ASE
contribution to democratic and social development. Would it not make sense
for students and teaching staff to learn to cooperate democratically and in soli-
darity? Tuition fees and other instruments of higher education policy instead
lead to the dominance of market, consumer and competitive relationships. Tui-
tion fees also mean that the incomes of graduates and non-graduates diverge
even more. Whether it is good for a society that rich and poor move farther
and farther apart, we leave to your own judgement.
STUDIES
55
3. MODELS OF SOCIETY: A COMPARISON
In this chapter:
• the relationship between market capitalism and democracy is discussed;
• the liberal, conservative and social democratic social models are elaborated
and compared;
• the development and history of ideas of the labour movement is broadly
sketched and the concept of democratic socialism discussed;
• the social democratic conception of humankind is contrasted with other
conceptions.
Der SSpiegel,
D i l issue
i 43.
43 Source:
S www.spiegel-online.de
i l li d (22.10.2007).
(22 10 2007)
What’s on the cover? A number of leading SPD figures are portrayed in caricature: they have jumped
into a lifeboat after an accident at sea. The captain, Gerhard Schröder, remains
on the sinking ship, while Gregor Gysi and Oskar Lafontaine have commandeered
their own lifeboat. The title ‘If we swim side by side’16 plays on the word ‘swim’
as a synonym for ‘not knowing’ – which in English would best be expressed as
‘being all at sea’ – in this case, not knowing where the journey is headed. Even
worse, the cartoon implies a dramatic shipwreck in which people’s sense of
direction goes overboard along with everything else.
16 This is also a reference to the workers’ song ‘Wann wir schreiten Seit’ an Seit’
56
What do you think of the cover of Der Spiegel? What does it say about people’s What the cover
views on political parties (in this case, the SPD)? It plays on people’s fears and does not show –
the impression that politics today lacks a fundamental sense of direction – in some comments
these circumstances, it is inevitable that things will hit the rocks. This familiar on interpretation
accusation is, like the whole scene, deliberately sensationalist, because everyone
has their own ‘socio-political compass’ and in democratic parties – it does not
matter which one – it is not just permitted, but entirely necessary that people
argue about the coordinates and then take democratic decisions about them.
Furthermore, there is no sense in which the SPD can be said to be sinking or Debate about
shipwrecked. Radical political change – not unusual, but rather necessary after the coordinates
a change of leadership or election defeat – is not a shipwreck. is necessary
Der Spiegel’s cover, on the other hand, presents us with a somewhat authoritar-
ian view of politics, which cannot be reconciled with democracy. It is precisely
this ‘socio-political compass’ which is not depicted in the cartoon – neverthe-
less, no political course can be laid without it.
A ‘socio-political compass’ presupposes that one has some notion of possible Socio-political
political directions on the basis of which one can describe one’s own position compass
and ‘get one’s bearings’.
The navigation in question generally takes place – metaphorically speaking – on What are these
the high seas of everyday political decision-making. Even if fundamental issues bearings and what
are not involved, one’s core convictions are brought into play. does navigation
involve?
The advantage of this – although it also makes it difficult to describe – is that
every one of us has their own compass. For that reason, however, it is not sim-
ply a matter of handing out the same kind of compasses to all and sundry. How
each person then uses their compass to ‘navigate’ for themselves is up to them.
In democratic parties and organisations, it is a matter of negotiation.
57
What does Navigation has two essential requirements: first, one must know one’s own
navigation require? views – in other words, one has to analyse where one stands and what situation
society finds itself in today.
The second condition is that one agree on a ‘political course’ which one wishes
to pursue.
Both starting point and goal (or reality and aspiration) can be expressed in terms
of competing socio-political ideas. Liberal, conservative, socialist and social
democratic arguments try to define starting point and goal in such a way that
it is possible to navigate in their preferred direction.
58
Even these minimal definitions show that a society that wishes to be organised Contradictions
in terms of both market capitalism and democracy is inevitably exposed to ten- between democracy
sions, since the effects of pure market capitalism, like those of a completely and market
democratic society, necessarily come into contradiction. capitalism
For purposes of illustration, democracy and market capitalism can be repre- Form of the
sented as a dynamic field: economy and form
of society in tension
o
coordinated
free and
democratic Form of the
state and
authoritarian
the economy
uncoordinated
Form of the
economy/market
Figure 4
Fi 4: SSystem off coordinates
di ffor the
h classifi
l ification
i off models
d l off society
i 59
For the form of the economy or the market the pole ‘coordinated/uncoordinated’
can be adopted: an uncoordinated market, left to its own devices, on the one
hand, and a regulated market and a regulated economy on the other.
On the other axis, the tension is between an authoritarian state on the one hand,
and a democratic order resting on the civil rights and liberties of the individual,
on the other hand.
Market capitalism and democracy are two fundamental concepts which can
describe the current coordinates of society. Political theories, in defining their
goals, take their bearings from how they interpret these coordinates and in what
direction they wish to go with reference to them.
How may the The question we must now answer concerns how the different ideas or models
different models of of society can be classified in terms of this system of coordinates:
society be classified? • liberal position
• conservative position
• socialist position
• position of social democracy
Perhaps you were somewhat hesitant about how to proceed with your classifi-
cation. Or didn’t you hesitate at all?
If you did hesitate, that is no cause for concern, since there is every reason
for uncertainty. We shall shortly see that a systematic difficulty may well be
involved.
Perhaps the following distinction will help: First, try to fill in the system of coor-
dinates in accordance with the claims these models of society make for them-
selves. Second, consider how, on the basis of your understanding of politics,
these models might be positioned more realistically.
60
‘Claim’ ‘Reality’
coordinated coordinated
uncoordinated uncoordinated
Fi
Figure 5 Claim
5: Cl i and
d realistic
li ti positioning
iti i
Now comes the fascinating question: If there is a discrepancy between the ‘claim’ When there is
version and the ‘reality’ version with regard to classifications of a model of soci- a discrepancy
ety, what is the reason for it? (For the purpose of argument, we shall exclude between claim and
the possibility that we are simply wrong.) reality with regard to
a model of society,
Keep the two systems of coordinates with their classification of models of soci- what is the reason?
ety in mind as you consider the following explanations and see whether they
are of any help.
The question concerning the difference between claim and reality can be
answered only if, on the one hand, one subjects the respective models of soci-
ety to closer theoretical scrutiny and, on the other hand, one puts them to the
test of empirical data, for example, by examining the extent to which countries
which take their bearings from certain models – or have done so in the past – in
fact live up to them. If there is an unusually large gap between claim and reality,
it can partly be put down to misleading rhetoric (for example, for the purpose of
clinging on to power) which tries to sell something as being in the general inter-
est, when in fact it only serves the interests of a few. If one is not to be duped
in such instances, the crucial question must always be: ‘Cui bono?’ – ‘Who ben-
efits?’ Who gains from this line of argument?
On the other hand, the gap may be theoretical, in which case the empirical find- On the one hand:
ings and the theoretical claim cannot be made congruent under current social Cui bono? Who
conditions. benefits?
61
On the other In other words, we may be dealing with a model of society whose prospects of
hand: Utopian- being realised in the foreseeable future are remote, and so can be considered
ism as diagnosis? utopian from today’s standpoint. That does not mean that the claim should be
criticised; what would merit criticism, however, is if such political utopianism
prevented people from taking whatever action is realistic in the present circum-
stances. In this respect, one can speak of a second-order obligation, namely that
a political idea must be realistically achievable by democratic means.
Utopianism without social action is pure indulgence, which only those who are
reasonably well-situated can afford. Whether or not a utopianism that does
not seek to shape politics and society exists cannot be answered categorically.
It becomes clear only when the political strategies of individual political groups
are put to the test in their actual behaviour.
That is sufficient, for the time being, by way of orientation with regard to pos-
sible explanations of why claim and reality sometimes diverge. When reading
the following summaries of political tendencies and schools of thought, the best
thing to do is to keep at the back of your mind where you would ‘place’ these
ideas about society.
In what follows, the different ideas about society promulgated by liberalism, con-
servatism, socialism and social democracy are presented in brief. Although there
is a danger in summarising models of society so briefly, some of the fundamental
arguments of individual tendencies should be presented at this point. There are a
few comments at the end of the presentation on the respective ‘reality versions’.
Since this will be rather a simplistic classification, some follow-up texts related
to the relevant model are listed at the end of each presentation.
62
3.2. Liberal Positions
Liberal positions emphasise the free market with regard to the relationship
between the market and democracy and stress freedom of enterprise. Demo-
cratic decision-making is largely limited to an ‘order-maintaining’ state which
ought merely to stand as guarantor of the continued functioning of the free
market. To list a number of fundamental assumptions of the liberal approach:
• The market essentially regulates itself by ensuring that the supply of material
and non-material goods is guided by society’s demand for them.
• Freedom has absolute priority over equality and solidarity, and the individual
over society.
• Freedom is realised directly through the market. A (substantial) restriction of
market freedom, in these terms, is to be equated with the restriction of free-
dom in general and so should be rejected.
• The state has the task of creating secure framework conditions for the market
and of making minimal provision against life’s contingencies, which can befall
people through no fault of their own, but not as a fundamental right. This
narrowly circumscribed political space is democratically regulated. The state
is responsible merely for society’s legal-institutional framework.
• The image of humanity is oriented towards human freedom, in terms of which
human beings distinguish themselves by means of their achievements and
live as ‘utility maximisers’. Freedom in the market is supplemented by free-
dom from the state: the state only has to ensure that society does not infringe
people’s personal autonomy. The state should protect people’s freedom, but
it should not itself intrude upon their freedom.
• Liberal concepts assume an independent central bank, which pursues the
stability of the currency as its principal aim (monetarism).
Classical liberalism in the area of the constitution of the state – but not in the Classical liberalism
constitution of the economy! – is also a major influence today on social demo-
cratic reasoning (see chapter 3.4.).
63
One of the most In the first half of the twentieth century, the contributions of some new
famous new liberals: liberals17 significantly radicalised Locke’s (in historical context) balanced position.
Friedrich von Hayek
For example, Friedrich August Friedrich August von Hayek (1899–1992)
von Hayek18 represents the view was an Austrian economist and one of the most
that freedom and democracy may important liberal thinkers of the twentieth cen-
be realised exclusively within the tury. He was one of the main proponents of the
free market and an opponent of any kind of state
framework of an economic sys-
interference. As a result, he was one of socialism’s
tem resting on unrestricted private severest critics.
property and competition. Society
emerges as a ‘spontaneous order’ in which economic subjects interact freely
via the market in association and competition. The task of the state is merely to
lay down general rules to govern the behaviour of individuals in relation to one
another (see Conert 2002: 287). The problem that freedom and democracy are,
in reality, available only to a few is without significance in Hayek’s spontaneous
order. Also insignificant in these terms is the fact that under unbridled capital-
ism one person’s economic freedom may result in another person’s economic
want and lack of freedom. There is no room here for a more detailed discussion
of Hayek’s argument: Conert provides a good and subtle overview.
Another new liberal: The divergence of claim and reality with regard to new liberal arguments is
Wilhelm Röpke also evident from the ideas of Wilhelm Röpke. Röpke represents the view that
liberalism is the sole alternative to the tyrannical form of society characteristic
of socialism: whoever ‘does not want collectivism’, he writes, must ‘want the
market economy … but the market economy means free markets, a free press
and cost elasticity, in other words, adaptability and subordination of producers
to the dominance of demand. In negative terms, it means the exact opposition
of monopoly and concentration and that anarchy of interest groups which is
spreading to every country like the suitors of Penelope. Market economy means
choosing, instead of the depraved collectivist principle, the sole regulatory prin-
17 In what follows, we apply the term ‘new liberal’ to theoretical positions which developed following
classical liberalism in the first half of the twentieth century and were further developed from the 1980s
onwards. Certainly, in recent years on the political Left the term ‘neoliberal’ has become established as
derogatory and a kind of general ‘battle term’ . Regardless of what one thinks of neoliberal ideas, there
is a tendency to describe all negative phenomena in today’s societies as ‘neoliberal’. In order to avoid
this analytically inaccurate form of argument we shall here use the term ‘new liberal’.
18 At this point it should be mentioned that von Hayek’s line of argument differs significantly from the ideas
of other new liberals on a number of central points (for example, regarding the constitution of soci-
ety and the concept of history). For that reason, von Hayek is a particularly influential but by no means
uncontroversial figure, even among new liberals.
64
ciple that we have at our disposal to create a highly sophisticated and highly
technologised society, but in order that it really does ensure the regulation of
the economic process it must be unadulterated and [may] not be corrupted by
monopolies’ (Röpke 1946: 74).
There is already a contradiction here that turns up in many liberal positions: on Further reading –
the one hand, a (largely) self-regulating market is propounded, freed from the new liberals and
shackles of political regulation; on the other hand, the formation of monopo- their critics:
lies is sharply criticised and a level of control demanded on the part of the state Friedrich August von
to ensure that competition is not cancelled out by them. This conflicts with the Hayek (1946), The
image of a ‘free market’, however. The market obviously leads to frictions which Road to Serfdom.
it cannot regulate itself. A managing state is needed for that.
Wilhelm Röpke
Apart from that, the new-liberal position assumes that the freedom of the market (1942), The Social
is enough to ensure the freedom of the individual, an assumption that cannot Crisis of Our Time
be sustained in view of the social exclusion brought about by market capitalism.
Wilhelm Röpke
At the latest since the 1960s, a dense web of new liberal research networks, (1946), Civitas
political consultancies, economic institutes and lobbyists has been established. Humana (also
This web contributed not a little to the ‘neoliberal turn’ of the 1980s, for exam- published as The
ple, under Thatcher and Reagan.19 New-liberal positions, as a rule, find support Moral Foundations
among the owners of capital and those whose life circumstances are secure of Civil Society)
(classically, therefore, in the educated middle class and the business elite). New
liberalism, therefore, is an elitist model of society in a double sense: its formation Hansgeorg
occurred among the well-to-do and it represents their interests. Conert (2002),
‘Zur Ideologie des
Neoliberalismus –
Am Beispiel der
Lehre F. A. von
Hayeks’, in: Conert,
pp. 275–96
19 There is a valuable essay on the emergence of these ‘neoliberal networks’ in Plehwe / Walpen (2001).
65
3.3. Conservative Positions
Conservatism: The conservative position is the most difficult to grasp. This is owing to both
oriented towards historical and systematic reasons.
what already exists
Historically, conservative positions – as the word implies – have, in the main,
been oriented towards what happens to be in existence and its preservation.
As a result, it is difficult to establish a discrete, universal notion of it in historical
terms. In short: there have always been conservatives, but not a constant, gen-
eral conception of conservatism.
In the French Revolution and at the time of the Restoration in the first third of
the nineteenth century, conservatives represented corporate privileges of birth
and the interests of the aristocracy. In the emerging German Empire, they spoke
up for the small German states and, in the end, for the Empire itself, while in the
Weimar Republic they stood, in large part, for the restoration of the Empire and
against democracy. In the 1980s, conservatives returned rather to the classical
values of the new liberals and called for the overturning of the reforms of the
1970s. A constant thread cannot be identified.
• Conservatives take their bearings, as a rule, from the basic values of family,
personal responsibility and merit or achievement. Tradition is given pride
of place.
• The state is, as a rule, derived from a ‘higher order’ of values, which are
reflected in the nation. As a rule, this ‘higher order’ provides justification for a
more hierarchically oriented mode of thought and a positive attitude towards
(meritocratic) elites in society. Social inequality is justifiable in these terms.
• In Germany – but also in many other countries – conservative thought is
oriented towards a Christian image of humanity. Fundamental ideas from
Catholic social doctrine (charity, subsidiarity principle) are cited as values.
• In recent years, the term ‘new bourgeois values’ (see Buchstein/Hein/Jörke
2007: 201) has come into use among conservatives.
66
• It describes a citizen20 whose life is oriented towards such values as family,
propriety, loyalty and courtesy and participates in civil society and in profes-
sional life as an autonomous individual. Udo di Fabio formulates it as follows:
‘To be bourgeois today means to accept the link between duty and desires,
love and conflict, privation and prosperity; to understand freedom above
all as freedom of commitment and success as a result of one’s own hard
work, and on this basis to take pleasure in moderation, without imposing
commitment and hard work as absolutes. To be bourgeois means to keep
in view, whatever one’s personal orientation, community and the concerns
of all, including the vulnerable and the needy, and, alongside freedom and
equality, also to foster fraternity’ (di Fabio 2005: 138f). The concept of ‘new
bourgeois values’ also reflects a concept of individual freedom which appeals
principally to individual-oriented morality. This differs clearly from a socialist
or social democratic conception of humanity, but also from the liberal view.
• Since the 1980s and the ‘spiritual-moral turn’ represented by the Kohl gov-
ernment there has been something of an amalgamation of the Christian- Further reading –
conservative conception of humanity, on the one hand, and economic conservatism:
liberalism, on the other. Angela Merkel’s government, in contrast, has Udo di Fabio
incorporated more social democratic elements and ways of thinking – albeit (2005), Die Kultur
revised and somewhat watered down – in its own standpoint. To some der Freiheit
extent, this has fostered potential conflict between ‘modernisers’ and ‘con- [The culture of
servatives’ in the CDU. freedom], Munich.
For conservatism, especially, it must be emphasised that the unambiguous clas- Edgar Jung (1932),
sification of a party and historical ideological constants are difficult to establish. Deutschland und
die konservative
It is rather easier to delineate the target group of conservative views: primarily Revolution, Munich.
the well-to-do from the educated middle class and the business elite, as well as
the religious – mainly Catholic – sphere. Martin
Greiffenhagen
(1971), Das
Dilemma des
Konservativismus
in Deutschland,
Munich.
This question can be easily answered: the idea of socialism became influential
with the workers’ movement – in Germany, with industrialisation in the nine-
teenth century.
There is no space here for a comprehensive history of socialist ideas, but only a
brief presentation of essential points of departure and periods of radical change.
68
For the first time, a programme was
Karl Marx (1818–1883) was an outstanding formulated for the workers’ move-
social economist and one of the most important
ment in language that most people
philosophers of the nineteenth century. Above
all, his economic analyses of capitalism remain of could understand.
prime importance and go far beyond the simplify-
The theoretical foundations of this
ing presentations of his critics, but also of many
of his followers. political programme were rein-
forced in further works, principally
by Karl Marx.
Marx The fundamental assumptions of socialism, as a conceptual model
of the period, can be drawn from them.
• Marx starts out from the idea that (market) capitalism leads to inequality Characterised by
and lack of freedom for the many in contrast to freedom for the few. On one inequality and
side stand the owners of capital and on the other, those who do not own lack of freedom
capital and so are forced to sell their labour for wages. Market capitalism is
built on the fact that wage labour is not paid the value of what it produces.
In this way, the owners of capital are able to accumulate more and more
capital. It is irrelevant in this connection whether the owners of capital are
real persons, large companies or large financiers.
• The competition between the owners of capital and the constant pressure Competition
to accumulate more capital in order to re-invest in production and be able and pressure on
to produce on more favourable terms than the others – this ‘treadmill’ con- the workers
stantly puts pressure on the workers’ working conditions and results in,
besides poverty, production overcapacity. Goods cannot, then, be sold and
capital is no longer invested or is annihilated in overproduction crises due
to lack of markets. This is the reason, in broad terms, why Marx assumes
that economic crises are an essential – and necessary – part of the (market)
capitalist system.
• Inequality and lack of freedom, which are regarded as systematic conse-
quences of (market) capitalism, in particular contradict the claim to equal
freedom for all.
• The claim of democracy can be realised, therefore, only if ownership of the
means of production is nationalised and decision-making on the use of
capital takes place on the basis of democratic structures. Private property,
however – in contrast to what is generally supposed – would not be subject
to nationalisation.
69
• The Marxist vision of humanity is constructed, broadly speaking, on the
basis of a discrepancy: human beings who are, in principle, free, equal and
solidaristic live in a system based on an unequal and unfree system oriented
towards maximising utility. This vision of humanity, therefore, contains a
strong normative claim.
• The theories of Marx and Engels, therefore, constitute – alongside vari-
ous other theories and doctrines – an important point of departure for the
workers’ movement.
• Nevertheless, the effects of this political programme remained extremely
limited, among other things because Marx and Engels did not – or were
unable to – take into account a number of central factors in their analysis,
especially the question of the relationship between socialism and the state.
On this basis, the state is understood first and foremost as an association of free
people, a provocative notion, one would have thought, given that the Prussian
state and the German Empire, founded some years later, were characterised by
a monarchical-hierarchical structure.
70
‘It is the state whose function it is to carry on this development of freedom, this
development of the human race until its freedom is attained. … The object of
the State, therefore, is not only to protect the personal freedom and property of
the individual with which he is supposed, according to the notion of the bour-
geoisie, to have entered the State. On the contrary, the object of the State is pre-
cisely this, to place individuals through this union in a position to attain to such
objects, and reach such a stage of existence as they never could have reached as
individuals; to make them capable of acquiring a level of education, power and
freedom which would have been wholly unattainable by them as individuals.’
(Lassalle, The Working Class Programme, 1862 – [German edition] 1987: 222f)
The object of the state should be ‘the education and development of the human
race until its freedom is attained’. The significance of the fourth estate or the
working class for Lassalle, therefore, was precisely to take this idea of the state
further. Accordingly, the basic demands were direct and universal suffrage and
emancipation through the formation of workers’ associations. In Lassalle’s view,
these should be established with the assistance of the state.
Lassalle thereby introduced two of the central starting points for the debate on
social democracy and democratic socialism: on the one hand, the question of a
democratic state and its social preconditions and, on the other hand, the ques-
tion of what strategies would best serve the interests of the workers.
In 1875, the General German Workers’ Association (Allgemeine Deutsche Arbeiter- Unification party
verein) and the Social Democratic Workers’ Party (Sozialdemokratische Arbeiter- conference in
partei) merged, at a conference held in Gotha, to form the Socialist Workers’ Gotha, 1875
71
Party of Germany (Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands). The foundation
stone was laid, therefore, in the German Empire for the further expansion of
social democracy, and also against Bismarck’s Anti-Socialist laws. The essential
points of conflict were also sustained during this period, however, and flared
up again later on, leading to a split in the workers’ movement.
72
that reforms would be possible within society and the capitalist state. In addition,
capitalism was not destined to collapse; instead, capitalism’s internal crises would
diminish rather than increase. By strengthening the trade unions and cooperatives,
reforms could be achieved in society, developing into socialism. The trade unionist
Adolph von Elm summed up the essence of the revisionist programme as follows:
‘The daily practical struggle for social reforms, for the amelioration of the condi-
tion of the working people within the framework of current conditions, and for
democratic institutions, represents for social democracy the only way of leading
proletarian class warfare and working towards the final goal: the seizing of politi-
cal power and the abolition of the wage system. For social democracy, there is an
inseparable link between social reform and social revolution, in that the struggle
for social reform is the means, but radical social change is the goal’
(Luxemburg 1899: 369).
73
Split in the workers’ These three tendencies in the workers’ movement and the SPD could still have
movement been reconciled in the face of external pressure from the Empire (Kaiserreich).
However, the approval of war credits by the majority of the SPD and the resulting
split between the USPD (Unabhängige Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands –
Independent Social Democratic Party) and the SPD, together with the end of the
First World War and the emergence of the question of how a democratic society
should be organised, caused the workers’ movement to split.
Two ‘options’ for While Communists and some Socialists spoke in favour of founding a state with
the foundation of workers’ and soldiers’ councils, the Social Democrats played a major role in found-
the state in 1919 ing a representative democracy and shaping it right into the 1920s.
‘In the period in which capitalism was still completely free no alternative to
unorganised capitalism seemed conceivable other than the socialist organisa-
tion of the economy as a whole. … Then it gradually emerged that the struc-
ture of capitalism itself is changeable and that capitalism, before it is broken,
can also be bent’
(Naphtali 1929; here cited from Euchner / Grebing u. a. 2005: 305).
Different views In brief, the point of contention lay in the difference between revolution
of history and reform. On the one (‘revolutionary’) side, the view dominated that
what was needed was to overturn previous property relations and the con-
stitution of the state in order to achieve a new society, while the reform-
ist position was that contemporary society, together with its constitution
of the state, should be developed, by means of continuous reforms, into
democratic socialism.
74
The various ideas were also reflected in different models of the state:
Implemented in a number of
German cities after the
First World War as ‘workers’
and soldiers’ councils’
The idea of ‘democratic socialism’, as broached by the SPD, set out its stall in The idea of
favour of parliamentary democracy and a separation of the political and eco- democratic socialism
nomic spheres. In both spheres – political and economic – democratisation was
to be achieved in the interests of the workers and the common good. ‘Demo-
cratic socialism’, in this context, meant a complex and complementary interaction
between a socialist economy with strong workers’ representatives – trade unions,
works- and enterprise-level participation – and a parliamentary democracy.
In 1959, in Germany the SPD’s Godesberg Programme came up with the basic Social Godesberg
Democratic formula for the ‘free market’: ‘Competition as far as possible – planning Programme 1959:
as far as necessary!’ (Dowe/Klotzbach 2004: 332). Here a position was formulated ‘Competition as
which stressed ‘democratic socialism’ more than a ‘new economic and social order’, far as possible –
but at the same time accepted market capitalism in a largely regulated form under planning as far
the primacy of the political sphere. At the same time, Social Democrats dropped as necessary!’
the notion of a planned economy as it was implemented in the Soviet Union.
75
3.4.3. Democratic Socialism vs. State Socialism
Split from Marxism After the Second World War, the difference between an SPD oriented towards
democratic socialism and state socialist ideas came to the fore even more strik-
ingly. With the Godesberg Programme of 1959 the SPD officially detached
itself from Marxism as a worldview – although not from all of its analyses – and
thereby also from the idea of a development towards socialism as a ‘natural
necessity’. Instead, socialism was now described as a ‘permanent task’, which
could be justified by means of a whole range of religious or philosophical
motives. Central to the definition of democratic socialism now were the three
core values of ‘freedom, justice and solidarity’. The Social Democrats derived
basic demands from these core values, such as a clear declaration of belief in
freedom and democracy:
76
‘Our history is shaped by the idea of democratic socialism, a society of free and
equal people, in which our core values are realised. It requires an ordering of
economy, state and society in which basic civil, political, social and economic
rights are guaranteed for all, and in which everyone can live a life free from
exploitation, oppression and violence, and therefore in social and human secu-
rity. … democratic socialism remains for us the vision of a free and fair society in
solidarity. Its realisation is a permanent task for us. The principle for our actions
is social democracy’ (Hamburg Programme 2007: 16f).
Social democracy now faces the challenge, against the background of further The challenge
market globalisation, of responding to the influence of the financial markets and of today
radical change in the labour market and of deciding how a new balance between
market capitalism and democracy might be imagined. In other words, it is a ques-
tion of how a democratic socialism is to be achieved under these circumstances.
However, the SPD’s Hamburg Programme makes it clear that not only have new
questions emerged, but also the first answers (see also Chapter 6).
77
3.4.5. Digression: ‘Die Linke’ and Its Contradictions
‘Die Linke’ The Wende (‘turning point’ – now generally used to mean the collapse of the
Communist system leading to the dissolution of East Germany in 1989) of 1990
brought with it the establishment of another left-wing party, the PDS (Party of
Democratic Socialism), first of all in the East, as successor organisation of the SED
(East Germany’s Socialist Unity Party). In the meantime, the party has merged with
the WASG (Labour and Social Justice Alternative) to form the party known as ‘Die
Linke’ or ‘The Left’, gaining a foothold also in a number of western German states.
It is extremely difficult to pin down what ‘Die Linke’ is really about – it is still very
much in a state of flux. For example, in 2007, the party agreed on a set of ‘key
programmatic points’, but not a party programme in the classical sense.
In its ‘programmatic points’ Die Linke also declares its support for democratic
socialism:
Leaving aside these ‘key points’, however, a few other points might be adduced
in an attempt to describe Die Linke and its aims and objectives:
78
munists and so on. All these groups bring to the party very different ideas on
society – a uniform conceptual model or standpoint is not (yet) discernible.
• Die Linke is often popularly described as a protest party. This term is extremely
imprecise, since it links together two different aspects in a rather abbrevi-
ated fashion. The first is the question of who Die Linke’s voters are. This still
differs considerably in eastern and western Germany. The second aspect
concerns the question of political strategy or the kind of political action it
wishes to take – here, too, the outcome is very different with regard to the
federal states and the Federal Government.
• In the few academic publications that have concerned themselves with the
party so far, Die Linke is described as being, not only extremely heteroge-
neous, but also as markedly inconsistent. For example, on the one hand,
the party gives itself out to be pragmatic, moderate and modern, but on
the other hand, it adheres to an orthodox ideology with almost extremist
features (cf. Decker et al. 2007: 327). The large discrepancy between its
markedly absolutist declarations of intent, on the one hand, and its rather
more pragmatic policy in various state parliaments, on the other hand,
which from time to time contradicts these declarations of intent, appears
to confirm these impressions.
79
liberal’) conception of humanity from social democracy’s conception in tabular
form. For guidance, we have added a further column, summarising a ‘socialist
conception of humanity’:
80
4. THOMAS MEYER’S THEORY OF
SOCIAL DEMOCRACY
In this chapter:
• Thomas Meyer’s Theory of Social Democracy is discussed;
• the relations between market capitalism and democracy – partly strained
and partly mutually supportive – are examined;
• the key differences between liberals, libertarians and social democrats are
discussed;
• the relations between core values, basic rights and instruments are explained;
• the difference between negative and positive civil rights and liberties is
elaborated and the duties of the state discussed.
The discussion of core values and our glance at a number of different models
of society in the preceding chapters show that social democracy can draw on
a tradition of ideas. The concept is quite distinct from the other ideal models
and in such a way that – if it is to be properly explained – merely referring to the
core values of freedom, equality and solidarity as ways of attaining a just soci-
ety suffices no more than references to liberalism, conservatism and socialism.
In this context, four perspectives on social democracy were listed, and here we
shall briefly recall three of them:
81
These questions quite rightly stand – from a practical political perspective on a
theory – at the beginning of our considerations. They have to be addressed if
the theory of social democracy is to be brought to bear politically.
A glance at the core values has shown that a whole host of philosophical argu-
ments can contribute to the task of clarification, but do not suffice to establish
a normative foundation, precisely because multiple and controversial definitions
are involved. A theory of social democracy therefore requires a more specific
normative foundation as point of departure.
The third position – ‘Social democracy – that belongs to the SPD and therefore
it concerns only Social Democrats; it is their theory’ – does not hold water at all.
82
‘Social democracy, in contemporary usage, is both a basic concept of the theory Social democracy as
of democracy and a name used to characterise the programme of a political ten- a conceptual model
dency. Although these two usages are variously interrelated they refer to two
quite distinct states of affairs with different kinds of validity claims. The theory
of social democracy is not attached, either in its normative foundations or its
explanatory role, or even in the comparative discussion of the different ways of
realising it, to definite, pregiven political actors, although naturally every step
in its realisation depends on political actors lending their support to the pro-
gramme of practical action that derives from it. Political actors of various stripes
can, in turn, make use of the concept of social democracy as a programme label,
if they think it will serve their interest, largely independently of whether and to
what extent their political endeavours are congruent with the theory of social
democracy or even have any inclination to be connected to it.’ (Meyer 2005: 12)
In what follows, we shall not be considering the Social Democratic Party, but
rather a conceptual model which has developed in the course of debate since
the 1980s and 1990s.
As our starting point, we shall take the theory of social democracy presented by
Thomas Meyer, in which numerous different strands, which continue to shape
the framework of the debate on social democracy, are combined.
83
4.1. Starting Point
Initial question: The starting point for Meyer’s Theory of Social Democracy is the question –
What is the which we have already met – of the relationship between democracy and mar-
relationship ket capitalism.
between democracy
and market Both democracy and market capitalism are regarded as essential features of our
capitalism? social system, which have developed to some extent antagonistically.
Antagonistic relationship,
potentially undermining
democracy
Condition of Meyer claims, therefore, that, on the one hand, capitalism and democracy
emergence complement one another: market capitalism has thus been a condition of the
and factor of emergence and stability of democracy. On the other hand, he asserts a ‘curious
uncertainty? What tension’ between them because an unregulated market is inconsistent with the
is the relationship necessary preconditions for the participation of all.
between market
capitalism and Meyer describes the relationship between the economic system and democracy
democracy? in terms of two theses: on the one hand, he analyses democracies’ conditions of
emergence historically; while on the other hand, he empirically investigates the
interaction of democracy and market economy in today’s societies.
84
These two theses are, in the first instance, not self-evident: they are very much
theoretical, but also politically controversial, as we have seen.
What leads Meyer to take up these theses in the face of weighty counterargu-
ments?
‘Bourgeois society meant a model of economic, social and political order which The historical
made it possible, by overcoming absolutism, privileges of birth and clerical argument
patronage, to realise the principle of legally regulated individual freedom for
all; which guaranteed human coexistence in accordance with reason; organised
the economy in terms of markets on the basis of legally regulated competition;
guaranteed people’s life chances in accordance with reason; and both limited
the power of the state in the spirit of the liberal constitutional state based on
the rule of law, and reined it in by means of public opinion, elections and rep-
resentative organs in accordance with the will of “politically mature citizens”.’
(Kocka 1995: 23)
Free markets, the industrial bourgeoisie and the idea of civil rights and liberties
and their granting by the state developed in mutual dependence – in historical
terms, they cannot be separated.
85
4.1.2. Justification in terms of the Comparative
Study of Democracies
Justification based However, Meyer’s thesis is also backed up by much empirical research carried
on research into out within the framework of stability studies of democracies.
the stability of
democracies The empirical results of transformation research – whose primary object has been
the states of the former Soviet Union – also show that free market economies
can certainly have a positive, stabilising influence on emerging democracies.
However, there is also empirical evidence of the opposite case, namely where
economic power penetrates the political sphere and democratic participation is
undermined to the benefit of monopolies and cliques: this is the road to bogus,
at best merely formal democracy.
This points to the need for any theory of social democracy not only to look at the
formal constitution of a state, but also to examine empirically whether democratic
structures and fundamental rights can really be exercised by everyone.
All in all, Meyer argues, we can say that a free market economy can ‘favour’
democracy (cf. Dahl 2000: 140; Meyer 2005: 581).
Curious tension To be sure, Meyer does not regard the relationship between democracy and
between democ- capitalism as ‘simple’ or uncritically – the contradictions that we have already
racy and capitalism encountered also call this into question. Therefore, the contemporary debate
must be clearly distinguished from its historical origins.
86
There is no question that freedom of the market and the freedom of everyone
in society contradict one another.
This curious tension cannot simply be abolished or denied, but only shaped – that
is the essence of the historical and empirical research that Meyer draws on.
In this connection, in his theory Meyer distinguishes between two ‘ideal types’
that have developed from liberal theory: libertarianism and social democracy.
The Paradox of
Democracy Theory
Key question of
democracy theory
87
4.2. Libertarianism vs. Social Democracy
The Theory of Social Democracy differs from theories of libertarian democracy
normatively, theoretically and empirically. Both are rooted in liberal democracy
as it has developed since the Enlightenment of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries.
Libertarianism vs.
social democracy
Libertarian democracy rests on: Liberal democracy Social democracy rests on:
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Figure 9:
Fi 9 Comparison
C i off liberal,
lib l libertarian
lib i and
d social
i lddemocracy
88
• The common roots of liberal democracy relate to the European tradition of Liberal democracy
liberalism (see chapter 2.1.)
• and involve pluralistic democracy under the rule of law
• which is based on human rights.
Meyer therefore makes a theoretical distinction between the ideal-types of Who are the
libertarian and social democracy which can be exemplified in terms of the relevant actors?
actual political positions of individual tendencies and parties, although it is not
exhausted by them.
The tension between democracy and market capitalism is not subject to any fixed
order, but is constituted by negotiations between social actors. Power relations
between the two can shift from time to time in a given country, leading to a new
relationship between market capitalism and democracy there.
21 It can be seen that ‘libertarianism’ or the libertarian type coincides extensively with new liberalism (see
above). Meyer’s main point in introducing the new concept is that essential ideas of historical liberalism
diverge significantly from new liberal reductionism. That being the case, there is the potential for com-
munication between liberalism and the theory of social democracy.
89
or traditionally middle class forces, on the one hand, and the political Left, on the
other, meant that the enabling civil rights and liberties in the Basic Law remain
underdetermined. Consequently, in the jurisprudential debate there are different
interpretative approaches to the Basic Law: some consider the basic rights laid
down in the initial articles to be central, while other, more critical interpretations
take the view that the question of (private) property was, and still is, the crux of
the matter (cf. Haverkate 1992; see also the table comparing the fundamental
rights in the Basic Law and the UN covenants in chapter 4.3.).
A comparison with In the UN covenants of the 1960s, in contrast, the international perspective, but
the UN covenants also social developments at that time, gave rise to a much more far-reaching
formulation of negative and positive civil rights and liberties.
Above all, the theoretical tendencies of so-called libertarianism and the theory
of Social Democracy diverge on the question of how democracy and the market
(should) relate to one another and with regard to their respective explanations.
Both theoretical tendencies have the same roots: liberalism as it has developed
since the seventeenth century.
The decisive The crux of the matter, however, is how individual freedom is realised in society.
question: How is There are very different theoretical answers to this question.
freedom realised
in society? In order to be able to evaluate the different answers it is necessary to define the
concept of ‘civil rights and liberties’ more precisely.
Furthermore, before considering the various definitions of civil rights and liber-
ties to be found in libertarianism, on the one hand, and social democracy, on the
other, another conceptual clarification is needed: why is the talk of ‘civil rights
and liberties’ and not simply of ‘freedom’ and ‘core values’?
90
4.3. Digression: The Triad of Core values,
Fundamental Rights and Instruments
We saw that political theories and philosophies offer very different conceptions The triad of
of the three core values of freedom, equality and solidarity. We therefore face a core values,
kind of ‘foundational pluralism’ that runs through the various political conceptual fundamental rights
models and tendencies. and instruments
This plurality of grounds harbours a problem for any attempt to come up with a
comprehensive theory: if such a theory is related to particular aspects or foun-
dational strands it loses its claim to generality and potentially cuts itself off from
other philosophical, ethical or religious traditions.
A theory of social democracy, for this reason, must – according to Thomas Meyer – What is the
choose the broadest possible basis of argumentation. For this purpose, a level of broadest
argument must be found which is not culturally specific, but can be described in possible basis of
terms of a general and democratically legitimate framework. argumentation?
As a result, the level of core values will not do as a basis of argumentation: such
values form an important context for argument but they are variable and cul-
turally specific.
Any attempt to give an account of the foundations of social democracy, there- Three levels
fore, must take place on another level. Roughly speaking, three levels can be
distinguished:
Figure 10
Fi 10: D
Derivation
i ti off core values,
l ffundamental
d t l rights
i ht and
d iinstruments
t t
91
Core values At the level of core values – freedom, equality and solidarity – it is made clear
what the relationship is between the individual and society and how life in that
society is to be organised. Views about society which define and enlist the core
values for their own purposes have their origins – as we have seen – in a range
of socio-political and philosophical approaches.
Fundamental rights On the level of fundamental rights, the core values are translated or transposed
in terms of socially binding, democratically legitimised norms of action.
Unlike the core values, they are not subject to a foundational pluralism, but rather
regulate coexistence in society, regardless of their social grounding.
Instruments At the level of instruments, the social institutions are defined by means of which
states and associations of states are to satisfy the demands for action arising
from the granting of fundamental rights. They vary in different countries and
cultures – sometimes markedly – as the country studies show.
If one wishes to secure the broadest possible basis of argumentation for a theory
of social democracy, therefore, the level of fundamental rights must be chosen
as point of departure. Meyer selects the UN covenants on political, economic
and cultural rights as basis of argumentation. There are a number of arguments
in favour of this:
• The UN covenants are the most uniform and legally binding cross-cultural and
cross-national sources for fundamental rights worldwide. The UN covenants
have been ratified and so have become law in more than 140 countries.
• The UN covenants are aimed at the social development and diffusion of
fundamental rights on the basis of international cooperation. The ratifying
states are committed to continually improving the practical realisation of
the fundamental rights.
• The UN covenants contain extremely broad and precise formulations of
rights which every individual can claim.
92
The final argument can best be illustrated by means of a comparison between
the fundamental rights of the German Basic Law and the formulations of the
UN covenants:
Comparison of the
Area of UN covenants and
Basic Law UN covenants
regulation the Basic Law
Individual right ‘Human dignity shall be invio- ‘Every human being has the
lable. To respect and protect inherent right to life. This right
it shall be the duty of all state shall be protected by law. No
authority.’ (Art. 1) one shall be arbitrarily deprived
of his life.’ (Art. 6, para 1,
International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights)
‘Everyone has the right to
liberty and security of person.’
(Art. 9, para 1, International
Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights of 19 December 1966)
Right to work ‘(1) All Germans shall have ‘1. The States Parties to the
the right freely to choose present Covenant recognize the
their occupation or profes- right to work, which includes
sion, their place of work, and the right of everyone to the
their place of training. The opportunity to gain his living by
practice of an occupation or work which he freely chooses
profession may be regulated or accepts, and will take ap-
by or pursuant to a law. propriate steps to safeguard
this right.
(2) No person may be 2. The steps to be taken by a
required to perform work State Party to the present Cov-
of a particular kind except enant to achieve the full realiza-
within the framework of a tion of this right shall include
traditional duty of community technical and vocational guid-
service that applies generally ance and training programmes,
and equally to all.’ (Art. 12) policies and techniques to
achieve steady economic, social
and cultural development and
full and productive employment
under conditions safeguard-
ing fundamental political and
economic freedoms to the
individual.’ (Art. 6, Interna-
tional Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights of 19
December 1966)
93
Area of
Basic Law UN covenants
regulation
Property/living ‘(1) Property and the right ‘The States Parties to the present
of inheritance shall be Covenant recognize the right of
standards
guaranteed. Their content everyone to an adequate standard
and limits shall be defined of living for himself and his
by the laws. family, including adequate food,
clothing and housing, and to the
(2) Property entails obliga- continuous improvement of living
tions. Its use shall also conditions. The States Parties will
serve the public good.’ take appropriate steps to ensure
(Art. 14) the realization of this right, recog-
nizing to this effect the essential
importance of international co-
operation based on free consent.’
(Art. 11, International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights of 19 December 1966)
Education ‘(1) Every person shall have ‘1. The States Parties to the
the right to free develop- present Covenant recognize the
ment of his personal- right of everyone to education.
ity insofar as he does not They agree that education shall
violate the rights of others be directed to the full develop-
or offend against the ment of the human personality
constitutional order or the and the sense of its dignity, and
moral law.’ (Art. 2) shall strengthen the respect for
human rights and fundamental
(1) The entire school freedoms. They further agree that
system shall be under the education shall enable all persons
supervision of the state. to participate effectively in a free
(2) Parents and guardians society, promote understanding,
shall have the right to de- tolerance and friendship among
cide whether children shall all nations and all racial, ethnic or
receive religious instruc- religious groups, and further the
tion.’ (Art. 7) activities of the United Nations for
the maintenance of peace.
‘1. Each State Party to the present Covenant undertakes to take steps, individu-
ally and through international assistance and co-operation, especially economic
and technical, to the maximum of its available resources, with a view to achiev-
ing progressively the full realization of the rights recognized in the present Cov-
enant by all appropriate means, including particularly the adoption of legislative
measures.’ (Art. 2, para 1)
A development perspective is therefore inscribed in the UN covenants, that is, an The development
obligation on states to continually promote the realisation of economic, social perspective of the
and cultural rights, based on fundamental political rights, ‘by all appropriate UN covenants
means’. This entails the model of an active state.
However, a state which actively intervenes and not only grants fundamental rights
but establishes them through positive action conflicts with a libertarian democracy.
One must proceed with caution, however, because in many countries the reali- The UN covenants
sation of fundamental rights is in disarray. There is a veritable gulf between are contravened
legal rights and their implementation. To that extent, critical questions about throughout the
the value of the UN covenants are perfectly understandable. Assertive interna- world because the
tional institutions are lacking. means to implement
them are lacking
Nevertheless, it must be said that, in comparison with the Basic Law, the UN cov-
enants formulate fundamental rights much more precisely, which could provide
social democracy with a basis for its claims.
It is true that, in Article 20, the Basic Law talks of the Federal Republic of Germany
as a democratic and social federal state. However, obligations to take action of
the kind foreseen by the UN covenants are very limited.
The controversies surrounding the manner in which an active state may mani-
fest itself come into bolder relief on a closer examination of fundamental rights.
It also becomes evident that a consistent libertarianism must contradict itself.
95
4.4. Positive and Negative Civil Rights
and Liberties
Definition: positive Liberal democracy defines itself, first and foremost, in terms of civil rights and liber-
and negative civil ties, which are conceded to everyone in society. A distinction can be made – follow-
rights and liberties ing Isaiah Berlin – between negative (formal and protective) and positive (socially
enabling) civil rights and liberties.
Libertarian thesis
Libertarian thesis The granting of positive civil rights and liberties curtails – and destroys – negative
civil rights and liberties. Negative civil rights and liberties have absolute prior-
ity: this is (in abbreviated form) Berlin’s thesis, which today is also represented
by many new liberals.
96
Negative and positive
civil rights and liberties
Basic question: What rules and Basic question: What must
conditions conflict with freedom society do to make it possible
of the individual? for all to be or to become free?
Libertarian thesis:
Negative civil rights The granting of positive civil rights and Positive civil rights
and liberties: liberties curtails – and destroys – negative and liberties:
civil rights and liberties Negative civil rights
tformal, ‘protective’ rights tmaterially enabling rights
and liberties have absolute priority.
This distinction between libertarian and social democracy calls for closer consid-
eration of how negative and positive civil rights and liberties relate to one another.
The libertarian argument gives negative civil rights and liberties absolute prior- Libertarian:
ity over positive civil rights and liberties, while the Theory of Social Democracy Absolute priority
asserts a logical and dynamic relationship between the two, based on equality. of negative civil
rights and liberties
The Theory of Social Democracy here refutes the libertarian thesis and proves a
connection between positive and negative civil rights and liberties.
97
Premises Meyer’s argument rests on a kind of argumentative four-step: he starts out
from the premise that the negative civil rights and liberties are valid and to be
applied universally in the libertarian argument, too – as far as libertarianism is
concerned, all that is necessary for this purpose is the existence of the negative
civil rights and liberties and their absolute priority.
When is the The libertarian thesis is refuted when there is a constellation in which someone
libertarian thesis is unable to exercise their negative civil rights and liberties because positive civil
refuted? rights and liberties are not granted.
Refutation by means Such a constellation is easily imaginable: persons who have no formally valid and
of an example effective positive right or liberty with regard to education, who do not have at
their disposal an infrastructure enabling them to participate in the life of society
and cannot purchase an education from their own means, will not be able to
exercise their negative right or liberty of freedom of expression. The negative
right or liberty would not be worth the paper it was printed on.
Conclusion: If negative civil rights and liberties are to have more than merely formal validity
interaction of and are to be effective for all, positive civil rights and liberties must be granted.
positive and That means that the wealthy have to accept social redistribution. This represents
negative civil rights a modest infringement of negative civil rights and liberties (to property).
and liberties
Taken to its logical conclusion, the absolute precedence of negative civil rights
and liberties cannot hold. Negative civil rights and liberties cannot be valid and
effective for all if not backed up by positive civil rights and liberties.
Negative civil rights and liberties can be effective for all only if positive – that is,
‘enabling’ – civil rights and liberties are ensured. Merely formal civil rights and
liberties do not help much when they cannot be asserted against the state by
everyone.
Without the social redistribution of wealth, usually organised by the state, civil
rights and liberties cannot be realised for all. Meyer’s conclusion is that a balance
between negative and positive civil rights and liberties has to be negotiated and
implemented by the state.
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4.5. Responsibilities of the State
The realisation of both positive and negative civil rights and liberties for all rep- Obligations to act on
resents an obligation to act on the part of the state. In contrast to a libertarian the part of the state
state, in which fundamental rights are merely postulated, with their realisation
left to the market, claims to genuinely effective fundamental rights for each
individual rather fall upon the state. In this way, the state is given an active role
and obligations to act, above all:
• to provide an infrastructure and services (so-called ‘services of general inter- The most important
est’) which are freely accessible, furnish safeguards and open up oppor- obligations
tunities;
• to create opportunities by means of social redistribution which allow people
to participate actively and independently in society and democracy;
• to embed the market economy so broadly that democratic structures and
workers’ interests are protected and freely represented.
The instruments used by the state to honour these claims of its citizens vary from Path dependent
country to country. This can be illustrated with a simple example: instruments
In Germany, there is a system of social security which has been developing since
the 1890s. The social security system makes a significant contribution to peo-
ple’s ability to lead, by and large, a decent life. At the same time, it took root
due to workers’ solidarity and ensured the government – as organiser – loyalty
to the emerging state.
The obligation to act which is derived from civil rights and liberties is met, to a
greater or lesser extent, by both forms of organisation.
99
Different The realisation of civil rights and liberties is not solely a matter of specific instru-
instruments ments, although they should certainly be examined.
100
5. COUNTRY MODELS
In this chapter:
• the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan and Sweden are
examined with regard to the realisation of social democracy;
• on the basis of the Theory of Social Democracy libertarian states are con-
trasted with less inclusive, moderately inclusive and highly inclusive social
democracies.
States can use a variety of instruments to satisfy the obligations to act arising
from fundamental rights.
In this context, social democracy cannot be defined as a pre-existing template: it What needs to
differs from country to country on a path dependent basis. Since social democracy be done and
is not content with the mere formal validity of civil rights and liberties, it must different modes of
be considered with regard to each country whether path dependent develop- implementation
ment points in the direction of social democracy – that is, whether the country
in question has already put social democracy into effect or is striving to do so.
To this end, Thomas Meyer and his colleagues compared empirical data on vari-
ous countries, in contrast to many theories of democracy, which dispense with
such an empirical comparison.
Five brief examples are presented here, which represent different degrees to Five examples
which social democracy has been realised:
• the USA, which in terms of its basic features is almost a libertarian country
and exhibits only a few elements which realise social democracy;
• Great Britain, as a less inclusive social democracy;
• Germany, as a moderately inclusive social democracy;
• Japan, which, although not comparable with Western countries in many
areas, can be classified as a moderately inclusive social democracy;
• Sweden, as a highly inclusive social democracy.
Of necessity, the country studies are presented only briefly here. Anyone want-
ing a more detailed look at the comparison of different countries should consult
the second volume of Meyer’s Theory (Meyer 2006).
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5.1. USA
Julia Bläsius
Freedom and For many people, the United States is the land of opportunity and freedom. At
social inequality the same time, it is well-known that social inequality is greater there than in
Europe. But what does this mean and how did it come about? What is certain is
that the USA is a country whose people value individual freedom above all else
in many areas, as a result of which society has traditionally been sceptical of a
strong central government. An early democratisation process and a political
culture that grew up hand in hand with it are among the reasons for this. This
affects the political actors, the political system, how basic rights are dealt with
and the character of the welfare state.
The USA was one of the first modern mass democracies, which led to the forma-
tion of a strong republican ethos in society. Universal suffrage was introduced as
early as the Constitution of 1789. While in Europe democracies mostly replaced
monarchies and, as a result, found centralistic state structures already in place
which had evolved over long periods, in America democracy emerged, so to
speak, at the same time as an American state after the War of Independence.
This state of affairs has shaped the understanding of the state and the political
culture in the USA right up to the present day. Society sets great store in indi-
vidual freedom and prefers a passive state. As a result, social inequalities are
accepted as the natural outcome of human coexistence.
Freedom as the The political culture is also very strongly characterised by liberalism, which puts
highest maxim particular emphasis on individual freedom. Unlike in Europe, liberalism in the USA
of action was not challenged by other tendencies, such as conservatism or socialism, as a
result of which it was able to establish itself as the dominant principle without
real alternatives. Even today, freedom is the highest good in American society.
In keeping with this, the government has traditionally had little scope, but above
all little inclination to influence the economy. Even the international financial
and economic crisis, which not only originated in the United States but has hit
the country hard, will at best only attenuate this principle.
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in consequence of which employment contracts and wages are negotiated
independently and individually. In this respect, the USA faces one of the char-
acteristic problems of a pluralistic democracy. Particular interests can exert
considerable influence, but only those which are well organised and financially
strong. Broadly-based interests which are at the same time only weakly organ-
ised, however, have little impact. This manifests itself in the strong influence of
certain lobby groups and business associations, as well as in the rather negligible
influence of ethnic minorities.
How do these facts manifest themselves in the political system and in the archi- What does that
tecture of the American welfare state? What kind of understanding of funda- mean in practical
mental rights underlies it? terms?
Political System
In the USA, they have a presidential system of government with a dualistic struc- Presidential system
ture, consisting of the executive and legislative branches. The executive power is of government
vested in the President, who is also head of state. The legislative branch consists
of the House of Representatives and the Senate, which together make up Con-
gress. The legislative and the executive branches are separate from one another
and, at the same time, mutually entwined. This principle of ‘checks and balances’
goes back to the political philosophers Montesquieu and Locke, and is intended
to prevent abuses of power. The aim of this system is to effectively protect the
citizens’ individual freedom against unwarranted power.
Political parties in the USA are, traditionally, not particularly influential, as a result Parties as election
of which party competition does not play a decisive role. Their predominant func- campaign
tion is that of election campaign organisations which organise and run campaigns organisations
for the chosen candidates. The parties do not offer a set government programme,
either. In Congress, they play a minor role, since, in the first place, they do not
have to support a government and, in the second place, the representatives vote
rather in accordance with their personal interests than ideologically.
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Furthermore, the Bill of Rights, which encompasses the first ten amendments to
the Constitution, grants American citizens a number of inalienable rights. They
are often termed ‘fundamental rights’. They are all designed to protect individu-
als against the encroachment of the state. The prevailing constitutional position
is that these rights are enforceable for every individual.
Negative without This early tradition of so-called political fundamental rights determines American
positive civil rights society’s understanding of fundamental rights to this day. Although these so-called
and liberties fundamental citizens’ rights or negative civil rights and liberties have been curtailed
in the wake of the anti-terrorism measures implemented since 11 September 2001,
in the USA they play a central role. In contrast, there are far-reaching defects with
regard to economic and social rights and so with positive civil rights and liberties.
These are not mentioned in the Constitution, nor has the USA signed any international
agreement which stipulates such rights. The welfare state is not institutionalised in
the American Constitution, either. As a consequence, citizens are entitled to social
benefits only if they pay insurance or are in need. However, the needy are not guaran-
teed these rights, and Congress can vote at any time to abandon transfer payments.
Political Economy
Uncoordinated The USA can be classified as a liberal or – in other words – uncoordinated mar-
market economy ket economy. That means that enterprises are in free competition with one
another and there is little cooperation or coordination with the government or
the social partners. Economic life in the USA is chiefly directed towards profits
and growth. (Some areas, such as agriculture or arms, are exempted from this
mechanism of pure competition.)
Trade unions and employers’ associations have been losing members increasingly
in recent years and have no influence on wage negotiations or the determination
of working conditions. Wage negotiations in the USA take place at establishment
level and employment protection is very low. This bestows a high degree of flex-
ibility on the economy and in particular the employers’ side, so that people can
quickly be hired, but equally quickly dismissed. The training system is also directed
towards providing workers with the broadest possible skills and know-how.
Orientation towards The financial system of the USA is also directed towards flexibility. Enterprises
shareholder value finance their activities, as a rule, via the capital markets, as a result of which share-
holder value – in other words, short-term corporate profits – has the highest pri-
104
ority. There are few close ties to speak of between enterprises and banks in the
USA. Relations between enterprises are based on market relations or enforceable
contracts. The barely regulated US financial system and the naked orientation
towards short-term shareholder value increases were strongly criticised in the
wake of the financial crisis that emerged in the United States.
Unemployment insurance: Although the individual states lay down benefit Unemployment
levels and administer the programme, in the USA unemployment insurance is insurance
centrally financed. The unemployed are entitled to assistance for six months,
which can be extended by a few weeks in exceptional circumstances. Unemploy-
ment benefit corresponds to 30 to 40 per cent of the previous wage.
Income support: In the USA, income support or ‘welfare’ is an anti-destitution Income support
measure, entirely targeted on the poorest and often resulting in the stigmatisa-
tion of those receiving it. There are also programmes for specific groups, such
as as dependent children or families in need. Besides financial aid, they often
also receive assistance in kind, such as food stamps.
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others have to rely on welfare. There is also a contribution ceiling for income tax,
as a result of which the burden on top earners is relatively light.
Health care system Health care system: There is no universal, state-financed health care system in
the USA. Only three groups benefit from state health care provision: the military,
people over 65 and those in need, two groups which are growing ever more
rapidly. Large segments of society have long been underinsured or even without
health insurance at all. The health care reforms passed under President Obama
signify a fundamental reorientation of the US health care system.
Education system
Education system The school system is divided into religious and public schools, the latter being
organised and financed locally. This is an advantage from the standpoint of
self-regulation and participation, but it results in considerable disparities and
differences in quality. Since the schools are financed from income tax, well-to-
do communities can invest correspondingly high tax revenues in the education
system, while poorer communities often have correspondingly lower resources
at their disposal for the purpose of education. The place and the surroundings
in which one grows up therefore often determine the quality of education. Nev-
ertheless, the American education system overall produces the highest rate of
people with a higher education in the world.
Summary
Both the political system and social welfare in the USA are characterised by a
weak, passive state, the aim of which is to grant individuals the greatest possible
(negative) freedom. Political fundamental rights have priority, while social and eco-
nomic rights play no role at all. Consequently, the state intervenes to regulate the
market or society barely or not at all and is unwilling to be tied down by interna-
tional agreements. This is the result of a fragmented, federal political system and
a liberal, religious and republican culture. It means that, while the USA does well
in terms of economic indicators, such as economic growth, it does rather poorly
with regard to the level of social exclusion.
For example, in comparison with other industrialised countries the USA has one
of the highest poverty rates. The Gini coefficient, which measures the extent of
inequality, is also relatively high. In terms of the criteria of social democracy, which
requires the granting of positive as well as negative freedoms, the USA comes off
106
badly. Whether one looks at fundamental rights, the political system or the welfare
state, it is evident that they all contain numerous libertarian elements. It is a matter
of interpretation whether one classifies the USA as a less inclusive social democracy
or as downright libertarian. However, the latter exists in its pure form only in theory:
even the USA has a – albeit rudimentary – social security system. Whether President
Obama’s plans to build up the social security system will succeed remains to be seen.
The impact of the financial crisis which originated in the United States and has hit
the real economy particularly hard has led to something of a rethink even there.
Whether this lasts and takes the form of institutional reforms only time will tell.
United States
Share of people in employment
70.9 % aged 15–64 (women) in relation
Employment rate 2008 to total population (source:
(65.5 %)
Eurostat)
Proportion of economically
Trade union density 2007 11.6 % active population organised in
trade unions (source: OECD)
107
5.2. Great Britain
Christian Krell
Introduction
A less inclusive Within the framework of the Theory of Social Democracy Great Britain is
social democracy described as a less inclusive social democracy. That means that social and
economic rights – in addition to civil and political ones – do apply here.
There is also a welfare state based on fundamental rights in essential areas.
Social services are provided only at a low level, however. Fundamental rights
have formal validity, but all too often they do not mean much in practice.
Great Britain therefore – considered in terms of the categories of social and
libertarian democracy – represents the outer limits of social democracy.
Early development The fact that in Great Britain the welfare state is relatively poorly developed
of the welfare state is surprising, given that elements of a welfare state developed there earlier
than in other European countries. The expansion of trade and technological
innovation from the eighteenth century was accompanied not only by gains
in prosperity, but also by an increase in the social problems associated with
industrialisation: poverty, poor nutrition and health, child labour and inad-
equate social insurance.
In response to these social failures, the first elements of a welfare state emerged
in Great Britain relatively early. Needless to say, at first there was no question of
a comprehensive welfare state. The reasons for this are to be sought primarily
in the deep structures of Great Britain’s politics and culture. Liberalism has long
played an important role in British political culture. This enabled the development
of free trade and economic prosperity and also led to a limited extension of politi-
cal rights. State interference in social matters was rejected, however. Instead, in
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries social and economic policy was shaped
by the liberal credo of laisser-faire: ‘Government shall not interfere’.
Nevertheless, a This lack of development of state social services was partly offset by charitable
poorly developed and philanthropic endeavours. Countless charities and private donations led to
welfare state the emergence of a distinctive non-state welfare structure in Great Britain, which
still exists. The problem has always been, however, that not all of the needy ben-
efit from this poor relief. Besides these charities, many – sometimes relatively
strong – trade unions developed in Great Britain in the nineteenth century. In
108
contrast to Germany, however, unified trade unions did not emerge, as a result
of which the British trade union scene is fragmented, even today.
The Labour Party – the British social democrats – emerged from the trade
union movement in 1900. After the First World War, the Labour Party devel-
oped into the second strongest force in Great Britain and in 1945, finally took
power. Under its leadership, it was possible to significantly extend the British
welfare state.
The Conservative Party and the Labour Party were in agreement concerning the Post-War consensus
basic features of the welfare state. The notion of a British post-War consensus is fre- and ‘social contract’
quently encountered, as well as a ‘social contract’ between the various social strata.
At the end of the 1970s, Conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher loudly The Thatcher Era
announced the end of the ‘social contract’ and called for the rolling back of the
frontiers of the state. In contrast to the political self-conception of the post-War
era, she emphasised that the state is not responsible for full employment. Any
kind of state intervention in the free play of economic forces was to be abjured, in
her view. State action should concentrate above all on stabilising the framework
conditions for economic activity, in particular the money supply. The Thatcher-
dominated period of Conservative government – 1979–97 – was, therefore, char-
acterised by privatisation and deregulation in many sectors of the British economy.
Only with the election of Tony Blair and the Labour Party in 1997 did Great Brit- Tony Blair and the
ain resume its development towards social democracy. Labour’s declared aim of Labour Party
guaranteeing social inclusion for all was supported by a wide range of measures.
A massive expansion of social services, in particular in health care and educa-
tion, targeted anti-poverty measures and the introduction of a minimum wage
are only a few indications of Great Britain’s resumption of the social democratic
path. The low unemployment rate maintained while Tony Blair was in power
and a slightly falling poverty rate – during a period when poverty rates in many
OECD states rose significantly – prove the success of this model.
109
However, the maintenance of the markedly liberal labour market and liberal
economic order of the Thatcher era, Blair’s authoritarian approach to the state
and, not least, his policy on Iraq as close ally of the USA, meant that the British
variant of the ‘Third Way’ was controversial.
Gordon Brown, who succeeded Tony Blair as prime minister, remained commit-
ted to Labour’s fundamental course, but introduced some new emphases. In
foreign and security policy the very close orientation to the United States was
developed into a more balanced strategy. Investment in public services contin-
ued, although with a stronger accent on social aspects.
Political System
Great Britain is rightly described as one of the oldest democracies in Europe. Hav-
ing said that, the British political system has also been described as an ‘elected
dictatorship’. How can these features be reconciled?
The British This apparent contradiction is resolved by a brief historical digression. Since the
Parliament Glorious Revolution (1688–89) the British Parliament has constantly gained in
importance. Over the centuries, more and more rights that previously belonged
to the throne passed to the Parliament, composed of an upper and a lower house.
Radical revolutionary change which, in many European countries, led to a sepa-
ration of powers, never took place in Great Britain. Power, which was originally
centralised in the crown, today for the most part lies with Parliament.
Strong government Two factors further strengthen the power of the government of the day. First, the
centralised structure of the British state mean that there are no strong regions
or states able to influence the legislation of central government. Second, the
‘first-past-the-post’ electoral system means that, generally speaking, one party
emerges as clear winner. Coalition governments – other than in times of crisis –
are neither usual nor necessary. The Conservatives and the Labour Party take
turns to form the government. Alongside these two dominant parties the Lib-
eral Party can be mentioned as a substantial force in the British party system.
110
As an exception to the rule they entered into a coalition government with the
Conservatives, as junior partner. Other parties have found it difficult to establish
themselves at the national level due to the first-past-the-post-system. Recently,
there have been a number of changes in voter behaviour and thus in the party
landscape. Exceptionally, in 2010 the Liberals, as junior partner, formed a coali-
tion government with the Conservatives. Furthermore, smaller parties, such as
the Green Party and the extreme right-wing British National Party are gaining
support, while the established national parties are losing it. At national level, how-
ever, the electoral system tends to result in stable and clear election outcomes.
The centralised structure of the state, clear majorities and a sovereign parlia- Development of
ment mean that the government has considerable scope for action. Fundamental social democracy
changes of political direction can therefore be brought about quickly and across open to the future
the board. The development of social democracy in Great Britain, therefore, is
more open to the future than in many other countries.
However, Great Britain did ratify the UN covenants on civil and political rights
and on economic, social and cultural rights in 1976. The European Convention
on Human Rights was also incorporated into British law in 1998.
Despite their formal validity, in some areas fundamental rights have little practical Are fundamental
effect in Great Britain. For example, traditionally high poverty rates in Great Britain rights truly
call into question whether the right to a decent standard of living is realised. effective?
Since Labour came to power, some fundamental rights have been applied more
extensively than previously. Examples include the national minimum wage, estab-
lished in 1999, and the obligation of employers to apply the same wages and
working conditions to part-time employees as to their full-time counterparts.
111
Political Economy
Great Britain belongs to the classical type of liberal market economy. In com-
parison to coordinated market economies, keenly competitive markets play a
more central role.
High significance The high significance of the market is illustrated, for example, by wage nego-
of markets tiations between employers and employees. Since employers’ associations and
trade unions are only weakly developed and fragmented, wages are frequently
bargained on an individual basis between workers and the company. Wages
are therefore directly linked to the level the employee can obtain in the market.
Participation or ‘codetermination’ – as it exists, for example, in Germany’s coal
and steel industry – is largely unknown in Great Britain.
Flexible labour It is easy to dismiss employees in Great Britain, owing to the poorly developed
market employment protection. Having said that, qualified workers are, as a rule, well
placed to find a new job in the flexible labour market.
Because of this low productivity the share of industry in the UK economy is rela-
tively small. The service sector is extremely strong, however. The City of London
is one of the world leading financial centres. Financial services and insurance
companies are strongly represented there. Around 76 per cent of British work-
ers are employed in the service sector.
112
Welfare State
In comparative welfare state research the British welfare state is generally Hybrid character of
ascribed a ‘hybrid character’. This reflects the fact that the British welfare state the welfare state
is subject to a number of different logics, not generally found in the same
system. For example, some welfare state services – for instance, in the health
care system – are universally provided, namely to every resident of the coun-
try. Other services are granted only on a means-tested basis, which is some-
times regarded as demeaning. Nevertheless, Great Britain is considered to be
a liberal welfare state. The social security system provides protection against
basic risks, while any needs which go beyond this basic provision have to be
met via the free market.
Health care system: The National Health Service (NHS) is the jewel in the crown Health care system
of the British welfare state. It is financed from tax revenues and guarantees free
medical care and the provision of the necessary resources and medicines. One
key advantage of the NHS, besides its universal provision, is its high degree of
transparency. However, the NHS was underfinanced for years, leading to bot-
tlenecks in care provision, which manifested themselves in, for example, long
waiting times for certain operations. Since 2000, enormous sums have been
invested in the NHS.
Social security: The National Insurance system insures against a range of risks Social security
and exigencies, such as old age, unemployment, accidents at work and invalid-
ity. National Insurance financing is contribution-based, in proportion to income.
Benefits are flat-rate and provide only basic protection. Anyone wanting to sup-
plement this basic protection must seek it in the free market.
Social assistance: National Assistance provides a range of benefits which are Social assistance
available to people who are not entitled to contribution-based benefits and are
not in a position to take advantage of private provision. These benefits are tax-
financed and usually strictly means-tested, which means that they are accessi-
ble only when the applicant has proved that they are truly in need and have no
other possibilities to help themselves.
113
Education system
Education system In Great Britain, the school system can be divided into state and (fee-paying)
private (confusingly known as ‘public’) schools. According to some, this division
of the British education system is partly responsible for the fact that, along-
side a small, highly qualified elite, the general level of education and training is
poor. The correlation between social status and educational attainment is plain.
Reform and development of the education system was, therefore, one of the
Labour Party’s professed aims. One of the most important measures taken by
the Brown government in this policy area was the gradual raising of the age at
which compulsory education or training ends from 16 to 17 years of age. The
aim was to bring it about that the United Kingdom was no longer a country in
which most 16 to 18 year-olds were neither in employment nor in education or
training (so-called NEETs).
Summary
Since the end of the 1990s, Great Britain has resumed its development in the
direction of social democracy. The professed aim of the Labour Party was social
inclusion for all, primarily through participation in the labour market. Social secu-
rity should be targeted at those truly in need, not made available to as many as
possible and at a high level. At the same time, the provision of social benefits
was conditional on the active efforts of benefit claimants to help themselves.
Stable economic growth and an active labour market policy led to high employ-
ment rates in Great Britain up to 2009 and, as a result, to falling poverty on the
one hand and increasing social participation on the other.
However, based on persistently high poverty rates, the low level of social benefits
and unequally distributed educational opportunities Great Britain at the end of
the Labour government must still be described as a less inclusive social democ-
racy and be located at social democracy’s outer limits. How things will develop
under the Conservative/Liberal government remains to be seen.
114
United Kingdom
115
5.3. Germany
Christoph Egle
A success story for Given the political and economic situation in which Germany found itself after
social democracy? the end of the Second World War, the Federal Republic22 can be considered a
‘success story’ for social democracy. Doubts whether Germany, after the end
of Nazi rule, could ever become a peaceful and democratic country have largely
been dispelled by the stability of democracy in the Federal Republic and its
anchoring in a vital civil society. Admittedly, the democratisation of state and
society fully asserted itself only at the end of the 1960s. The shame of Nazi rule
and the collapse of the Weimar Republic left an enduring mark on Germany’s
political culture. By way of illustration one might mention the renunciation of
nationalistic rhetoric and a deep-seated scepticism concerning extremism of any
kind. In contrast, the search for compromise and finding the ‘mean’ are impor-
tant virtues in the Federal Republic.
‘Model Germany’ Alongside the successful (re-)democratisation after 1945, the ‘economic mira-
cle’ also contributed to the emergence of the Federal Republic as a model for
other Western industrialised countries, based on an almost unique combina-
tion of economic performance, political stability and social balance. German
social democracy, too, identified itself with the social and economic order of
the Federal Republic, which it regarded as the realisation of its political val-
ues. For example, during the 1976 general election the SPD campaigned on
the idea of ‘Model Germany’. After reunification, however, it became increas-
ingly apparent that the Federal Republic was no longer living up to this model
role, having fallen behind in terms of economic growth and job creation. It is
curious that a number of the factors advanced in the 1980s as reasons for the
success of the ‘German model’ were, in the 1990s, identified as reasons for
Germany’s ‘decline’. Prominent among them was the system of government,
which had been slow to adapt to changing economic conditions (globalisa-
tion) and certain structures of the welfare state, which in some areas had
proved to be impediments to employment (especially for the low qualified
and women). On the other hand, it is a historic stroke of good fortune that
the Basic Law has remained in place, which was originally envisaged only for
a transitional period.
116
System of Fundamental Rights in the Basic Law
Learning the lessons of the failure of the Weimar Republic, the first 20 articles of Negative and
the Basic Law (Grundgesetz) anchor the fundamental human and civil rights and positive civil rights
liberties as law which is almost superordinate with regard to the state. Included and liberties in
are both the so-called liberal rights of privacy against the intrusion of the state the Basic Law
in the private sphere (‘negative freedom’) and democratic rights of participation
(‘positive freedom’). Social entitlements, such as the right to work, to accom-
modation, to education or to a minimum income are not cited in the Basic Law,
although they are in the constitutions of some federal states. No specific eco-
nomic system is provided for by the Basic Law, but it does contain a number of
bulwarks against both an unregulated market capitalism and a socialist planned
economy. For example, in Art. 14 of the Basic Law property and right of inherit-
ance are safeguarded, but the use of property ‘shall also serve the public good’.
This postulate found practical political expression in the concept of the ‘social
market economy’.
Political System
The system of government was also shaped in such a way that a failure of democ- High degree of
racy should no longer be possible. For this purpose, a high degree of separation separation and
and limitation of powers was put in place, whereby the power of the executive limitation of powers
was restricted to a greater extent than in almost any other democracy. These
bulwarks against an overmighty state include the federal system and the par-
ticipation of the federal states in federal law-making (through the Bundesrat,
the upper house of the German parliament), the strong position of the Federal
Constitutional Court, the independence of the Bundesbank (later succeeded by
the European Central Bank), the delegation of some state tasks to civil associa-
tions and, finally, the participation of the social partners in the administration
of the social security system. On the basis of this ‘fettering’ of state power the
American political scientist Peter Katzenstein once declared that the Federal
Republic was a ‘semi-sovereign’ state – it is important to consider, in this con-
nection, that until 1990 the Federal Republic was not fully sovereign with regard
to foreign policy, either.
This institutional obligation to balance different interests has done the Federal Central role of
Republic no harm at all – the system of government is characterised by a high political parties
degree of efficiency and representativeness. The parliamentary system has proved
to be sufficiently open to allow social development (for example, the emergence
117
of new parties) and, at the same time, has fostered stability in the formation of
governments. External expertise is brought in in the legislative process, since
representatives of affected interest groups are regularly consulted. The central
role in developing an informed opinion is played by the political parties, however;
this also applies to public offices. In this way, they perform an important medi-
ating function between society and state. Since the parties can participate in a
total of 16 state governments, besides the Federal Government, they are almost
never exclusively government or opposition parties. This applies in particular to
the two major parties, the SPD and the CDU/CSU, so that the Federal Republic
is never far away from a formal or informal ‘grand coalition’. This compulsion
towards cooperation has led, in particular in economic and social policy, to a
‘policy of the middle way’ (Manfred G. Schmidt), which fits in seamlessly with
Germany’s political culture, as described above.
Strengths and Party competition and the federal system of government can combine to bring
weaknesses it about that important decisions can be blocked or unsatisfactory compro-
of Germany’s mises reached due to party politicking. Instances of this multiplied after 1990,
orientation when, after the re-establishment of German unity, the number of federal actors
towards stability increased and the necessary changes were not made quickly enough in the face
of accelerating globalisation. Due to its tendency towards inertia, the political
system’s orientation towards stability – long a success factor – became a prob-
lem. For a number of years, reform of the federal system has been under way
with a view to making it more ‘decision friendly’.
Political Economy
‘Rhine capitalism’ Germany is a typical example of a so-called coordinated market economy, in
which enterprises obtain financing through long-term credits from their ‘house
banks’ (see above), unlike in a liberal market economy, which relies on the capi-
tal market. The resulting interdependence of industry and the banking sector
is a central characteristic of ‘Rhine capitalism’. Based on ‘patient capital’, in this
model strategic enterprise decision-making is possible within the framework
of a longer time horizon than in the case of the short-term shareholder value
Codetermination orientation. Also typical of ‘Germany AG’ is the – by international comparison –
and free collective far-reaching workers’ participation in enterprise management, with regard to
bargaining both establishment-level participation (organisation of workplaces, work rou-
tines and personnel matters) and enterprise-level participation (with workers’
representatives on the supervisory board of public limited companies and other
118
large joint-stock companies). In keeping with this, social relations are fundamen-
tally characterised by partnership and cooperation. Wage formation is subject to
free negotiations between employers and employees (free collective bargaining),
largely organised in national peak organisations. Industrial conflict is relatively
rare by international comparison and usually of short duration.
However, in recent years this model of the coordinated market economy has
been showing signs that it is coming apart at the seams. This is due, on the one
hand, to globalisation or the – related – growing inclination of German firms
to participate in international financial markets and, on the other hand, to the
erosion of industrial and social relations as both trade unions and employers’
organisations continue to lose power and, thereby, the ability to coordinate.
Welfare State
The Federal Republic of Germany is the classic example of the so-called con- Conservative/
servative/corporatist welfare state, also known as the ‘Christian-democratic’ or corporatist
‘Bismarck’ type. This terminology makes it clear that the German welfare state welfare state
was not, in the first instance, created by Social Democrats, but owes its historical
emergence above all to conservatives and Christian Democrats. After the Second
World War, the expansion of the welfare state was driven by two welfare-state
parties, the CDU/CSU and the SPD.
The pillars of the German welfare state are various independent social insurance High additional
systems, which are financed by the workers’ – assessment-based – mandatory wage costs
contributions. In addition, subsidies are provided from the Federal budget, either
when required or – as in the case of pension insurance – continuously. Since the
costs of the welfare state primarily fall upon wages, and so increase the cost of
labour, this mode of financing has proved to be an obstacle to job creation, in
particular in labour-intensive service branches. Insurance benefits are more or less
119
based on the equivalence principle, which means that the longer an employee
has paid contributions or the higher their income, the higher the benefits. This
employment-centred system can pose problems for people with less stable work-
ing lives, because they are able to acquire only limited social protection.
Pensions Pensions: The standard pension level paid by statutory pension insurance
(without supplementary company insurance) comes to about 70 per cent of the
average net wage. As a result of the most recent pension reforms this will fall to
around 50 per cent over the long term. To compensate for this fall, state allow-
ances and tax benefits will be available to encourage people to take out funded
supplementary pensions. If a person’s pension entitlements remain below the
level of income support a basic insurance comes into play for those who have
reached old age.
Health care system: The benefits of statutory health insurance are good by
international comparison, and the system is correspondingly costly. Children and
inactive spouses are co-insured with their parents or economically active partner
and those drawing social benefits receive automatic statutory health insurance
coverage. The self-employed, civil servants and workers with high incomes are
not obliged to pay mandatory insurance and can insure themselves privately,
often under more favourable conditions.
Education System
Education system The education system is more or less the sole responsibility of the federal states
and shows significant regional differences in terms of structure and quality.
While many states can compare with the best internationally, in other states
120
students are below the OECD average. It is also clear that in few other countries
is educational success so dependent on students’ social origins – in other words,
in Germany, the aspiration of equal opportunity has scarcely been attained.
Germany
Share of people in employment
70.7 % aged 15–64 (women) in relation
Employment rate 2008 to total population (source:
(65.4 %)
Eurostat)
121
However, the system of dual vocational training remains exemplary, by interna-
tional comparison, despite regular bottlenecks with regard to the availability of
apprenticeships. This system makes possible occupational qualifications geared
to companies’ needs and links them to compulsory school attendance, provid-
ing an all-round education.
Summary
‘Model Germany’ was long held up as an example and remained a highly inclu-
sive social democracy well into the 1970s. As a consequence of the exigencies of
German reunification and globalisation, however, this pre-eminence has been
lost. In the meantime, Germany can rather be considered a moderately inclusive
social democracy. The main reasons for this include the fact that the mode of
financing the welfare state has proved to be detrimental to the country’s interna-
tional competitiveness and, owing to the stability-oriented political system, the
necessary reforms could not be implemented in due time. Since the mid-1990s,
first the Kohl government, then, after some hesitation, the Schröder government
tried to bolster the competitiveness of the German economy by reorganising and
partly dismantling the welfare state and by adapting the social security system
to demographic ageing and changing family structures. These reforms met with
considerable resistance in some quarters. In all likelihood, however, it will not
be possible to raise the employment level without them. It remains to be seen,
however, whether in future Germany will be able once more to approximate a
highly inclusive social democracy.
122
5.4. Japan23
Eun-Jeung Lee
Conditions in Japan cannot easily be summarised in the usual terms. Every prime Low social
minister since 1955 – with a short interruption in 1993–94 – has come from the expenditure as a
conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). proportion of GDP
With regard to public expenditure on social provision, Japan stands at the lower
end of the scale among the highly industrialised countries. In 2005, Japan had –
with 22.9 per cent – below average social expenditure as a proportion of GDP
(OECD average 24.4 per cent), well below that of Germany (31.1 per cent) and
Sweden (33.6 per cent).
However, Japan also stands out as having the highest life expectancy in the world, High efficiency
in particular for women, an extraordinarily low rate of infant mortality and a remark- of the social
ably balanced income distribution. All this is strong testimony to the efficiency of security system
the Japanese social security system. In addition, according to opinion polls, 90 per
cent of Japanese people consider themselves members of the middle class.
Given this complex state of affairs, the subject of Japan must be approached with
great caution. Too often, discussions of Japan are reduced to mutually exclusive
alternatives: Is Japan unique or not? The answer must be ‘yes and no’. In Japan,
as in all other societies, both unique and comparable elements can be found.
It is not a matter of mutually exclusive alternatives, but rather of coexistence.
Political System
Japan’s political system can be characterised as a parliamentary democracy. On Development of
the one hand, the Constitution of 1947 guarantees citizens’ fundamental rights the political system
and, on the other hand, political contestation and decision-making are based in three phases
on political parties. The post-War development of the political system can be
divided, broadly speaking, into three phases. The first phase (1945–55) was that
23 This text is based on Eun-Jeung Lee (2006), ‘Soziale Demokratie in Japan. Elemente Sozialer Demokra-
tie im japanischen System’, in: Thomas Meyer (ed.), Praxis der Sozialen Demokratie, Wiesbaden, pp.
374 –444, adapted in some places. 123
of post-War reconstruction; the second phase (1955–93) is generally known as
the ‘55 system’; while the third phase (after 1993) is regarded as one of political
reform. The designation ‘55 system’ derives from the fact that both the main pil-
lars of this system – the LDP and the SPJ (Socialist Party of Japan) – were founded
in 1955. The Liberal Party (Jiyuto) and the Democratic Party (Minshuto) merged
to form the conservative LDP, while the left- and right-wing socialists formed
the SPJ. To begin with, it was hoped that this would develop into a two-party
system on the English model. In the course of the 1960s, however, it became
clear that a single party–dominated system had emerged, comparable to the
hegemony of the Social Democratic Party in Sweden, the Christian Democratic
Party in Italy and the National Congress Party in India. Apart from a ten-month
break between August 1993 and June 1994, the LDP’s dominance of parliament
was uninterrupted from 1955, including the post of prime minister. What changes
will occur as a result of the DPJ’s election victory in 2009 remain to be seen. 24
‘(1) Every citizen shall have the right to maintain the minimum standards of
wholesome and cultured living.
(2) In all spheres of life, the State shall use its endeavours for the promotion and
extension of social welfare and security, and of public health.’
Art. 27 of the Constitution declares that ‘Every citizen shall have the right and
obligation to work.’
Commitment to The Supreme Court, as the highest court in Japan, has repeatedly found that Art.
a welfare state 25 does not comprise an enforceable right, but rather is to be understood as a
programme statement. As a result, this commitment to a welfare state rather
serves as a basis for the state and legislation.
This anchoring of the right to work and fundamental social rights in the Con-
stitution obliges the Japanese government to institute an employment policy
and a welfare state. Consequently, the creation and maintenance of jobs has
24 See Andrew DeWit (2009), »Change« Comes to Japan?, Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (ed.), Berlin.
124
an important place in the Japanese welfare system, while the social security
systems – pension, health care, care and unemployment insurance – must be
established on a sound financial footing on the part of the state.
Political Economy
Japan belongs among the so-called ‘coordinated market economies’. In Japan, coor- Coordinated market
dination takes place between networks of enterprises, comprising cross-sectoral economy based on
groups or families of companies. These groups are known as ‘keiretsu’. Training enterprise networks
systems and technology transfer processes are also organised in accordance with
‘keiretsu’ structures. Workers are encouraged to acquire group-specific skills and
in return can count on lifelong employment. Trade unions are also organised on an
enterprise basis, which gives the workforce participation rights in company affairs.
Japanese enterprises are financed by long-term bank credits, which gives them
a relatively high degree of certainty with regard to planning, allowing them to
concentrate on long-term enterprise development.
On the part of the state, immediately after the Second World War and into the
1960s the labour market and employment were the priorities. At the end of the
1960s and the beginning of the 1970s the LDP government began – at first,
under pressure from the social policy measures of ‘progressive’, that is, commu-
nist or social democratic mayors – to comprehensively expand social security. In
the wake of the oil crisis, the brakes were applied to this expansive social policy,
although it was not reversed. The social partners and state actors were in agree-
ment that the active state labour market policy must be expanded in the face of
increasing global integration and its dangers.
Various measures were introduced within the framework of active labour market Active labour
policy, including wage subsidies, emergency loans and financial help for further market policy
training. Expanding employment and very low unemployment rates – up to the
second half of the 1990s – testify to the success of this policy.
Welfare State
Although Art. 25 of the Japanese Constitution contains a clause on the welfare Comprehensive
state and, on account of this, laws were reformed or newly enacted in many company social
areas as early as 1947, Japan long remained – in contrast to its economic dyna- benefits
mism – a late developer in social terms. In addition, in comparison with other
125
OECD countries, Japan is persistently found at the lower end of the scale in terms
of state social benefits as a proportion of GDP.
However, looking at state social benefits in isolation gives only a partial view
of the welfare state in Japan, since company social benefits there are exten-
sive, amounting to at least 10 per cent of the Gross Social Product. On average,
companies (for example, in 2001) spend the equivalent of around 570 euros a
month per employee in statutory social contributions and almost 1,000 euros
for company social benefits.
On top of that, the Japanese welfare state system seeks to foster social equality
or social integration, not indirectly by means of social transfers to individuals, but
rather by means of labour market and employment policy measures.
Pensions Pensions: As part of the 1973 reforms, pensions for so-called ‘benchmark pen-
sioners’ under the employee insurance scheme were raised to 45 per cent of
the average wage and linked to the cost of living index. Pension reform in 1985
gradually increased contributions and lowered pension payments in order, by
2025, to counterbalance the effects of the rapid ageing of the Japanese popu-
lation. So-called national pension insurance was introduced as a contribution-
based mandatory insurance for all citizens. It is intended to ensure a basic level
of provision.
The average old-age pension under the national pension system was around
405 euros a month in 2007. In 2007, 96 per cent of all citizens over 60 received
a national pension. In most cases, people also receive a company pension which
averaged around 1,300 euros a month in 2004, which was 53.4 per cent of the
average wage, or a lump sum of up to 64 monthly wages on reaching the com-
pany retirement age.
Health care system Health care system: The health care system is based on the principle of uni-
versality and the state guarantees, besides the medical care programme, that
health protection will also be extended to uninsured and needy persons. Reform
of employee medical insurance in 1984 introduced a personal contribution of
10 per cent, which in the meantime has been raised to 20–30 per cent. This
brought it into line with national medical insurance under which insurance is
provided to those who are not or are no longer members of an employee medi-
126
cal insurance scheme, such as the self-employed, farmers, employees of small
companies and family members. The personal contribution under the national
medical insurance scheme has been 30 per cent for quite a while.
Education System
Education has high status in Japan’s welfare system. In 2007, 93 per cent of Japanese Education system
who completed compulsory schooling (nine years) went on to the three-year upper
secondary level. If distance-learning schools and evening schools are also included,
this goes up to 97.3 per cent. Nevertheless, state expenditure on education is very
low by international comparison, at only 3.5 per cent of GDP in 2006. The Japanese
Education Ministry explains this by the relatively high proportion of private educa-
tional institutions: for example, 77.5 per cent of Japanese universities are private.
Summary
In Japan, all the elements of a social democracy are in place. Nevertheless, unlike
the other social democracies looked at here, this social democracy came into
being without a strong social democratic party or social democratic ideological
foundations. Japan’s bureaucratic, academic and political elites are character-
ised by their willingness to seek sustainable solutions regardless of ideology or
dogma and for that purpose gather and assimilate information, ideas and con-
cepts from all over the world.
One weakness of the Japanese system is that it remains largely tied to Japa-
nese citizenship. Traditionally, in Japan the integration of foreign minorities has
received little consideration, in either theory or practice. Labour immigration
began long ago, however, and is likely to increase in future. There is also room
for improvement with regard to gender equality.
127
have backed away from them and are now calling on their member companies and
the state to do more to increase employment and training. Based on the extensive
and efficient social security systems on the one hand, and the abovementioned
drawbacks and problems on the other, Japan can be described as a moderately
inclusive social democracy. This is particularly interesting because Germany is also
categorised as a moderately inclusive social democracy, despite the fact that its
state organisation and welfare and economic models are fundamentally different.
Japan
Share of people in employment
70.7 % aged 15–64 (women) in relation
Employment rate 2008 to total population (source:
(59.7 %)
Eurostat)
128
5.5. Sweden
Erik Gurgsdies
Sweden has so far been able to maintain its traditional welfare state, with exten- Maintenance of
sive public (monetary) social security benefits and a well-developed public services the traditional
sector, even in the age of globalisation. For example, Swedes have free access welfare state
to the education system, from nursery school to university; public health care
is also free of charge for all Swedes, apart from a small nominal fee for access;
in case of unemployment, 80 per cent of the previous wage is paid in benefit,
up to an upper limit; and in old age, an income-related public pension system,
including a tax-financed guaranteed pension for persons with insufficient income,
provides security against old-age poverty.
Particularly noteworthy in this connection are the political culture and the Swed- Political culture
ish mentality, which from time immemorial have been characterised by ideas shaped by
of social equality. They derive from old Germanic ways of life which a relatively socio-cultural
undeveloped feudalism was unable to extinguish. The remarkable socio-cul- homogeneity
tural homogeneity – at least until recently – was another explanation. Relatively
independent communities play a decisive role in local life. In a country in which
geographical distances can lead to a certain isolation, local administration has
deep roots in the national consciousness. Having said that, central framework
laws and targeted central financial subsidies provide for a high degree of uni-
formity in local living standards.
Political System
Consensus, negotiation and integration play an important role in the Swedish Political system
political system. Furthermore, the Swedish legislative process is characterised marked by
by a high degree of institutionalised participation on the part of civil society. consensus and
At the beginning of the process, the government appoints a committee to integration
investigate the relevant state of affairs. Although the government generally
129
takes the initiative in this respect, the Parliament, state authorities and even
civil society groups can also do so. The committee, depending on the law,
consists of politicians, experts and representatives of affected social groups,
and adopts a position, which is taken as a basis for discussion. The notion of
a compromise- and consensus-oriented society underlies this – the so-called
‘remiss’ – procedure.
Dominant position Social democracy has occupied a dominant position in Sweden’s political land-
of social democracy scape since the early 1930s. In the midst of the Great Depression, against the
economic mainstream, a credit-financed public employment programme was
launched to improve infrastructure and the housing situation of large families.
‘In Central Europe, people built barricades on the streets. In Sweden, we tried
to make progress by building flyovers’, said long-standing prime minister Tage
Erlander, emphasising the political thrust of the employment programme. The
success of the employment programme boosted not only the electoral success of
the Social Democratic Workers’ Party, but also its membership, as well as the LO
(Landsorganisationen) trade union confederation, its close ideological ally. The
dominant position of social democracy was also favoured by the fragmentation
of the centre-right opposition. The so-called ‘socialist bloc’, comprising Social
Democrats, Greens and the Left, the former Eurocommunists, is confronted by
the so-called ‘bourgeois’ or centre-right bloc, consisting of the Conservatives,
the Liberals, the Centre (former Farmers’) Party and the Christian Democrats.
The latter has formed the government since 2006. However, even after the elec-
tion victory of the centre-right bloc (the so-called ‘Alliance for Sweden’), a solid
majority of the parties favour the welfare state.
130
the Constitution assures them high standing in the public consciousness. This is
also reflected in the construction of the Swedish welfare state and its political
(market) economy.
Political Economy
Swedish economic policy is based on the so-called Rehn-Meidner model, named The Rehn–
after the trade union economists Gösta Rehn and Rudolf Meidner. In 1951, they Meidner model
developed a macroeconomic model designed to combine full employment with
a »solidarity wage policy«, without thereby triggering inflationary processes.
The basic idea was that permanent full employment cannot be achieved by a
generally high aggregate demand, whether due to favourable global economic
developments or national economic stimulus packages. Since individual economic
branches always grow at different rates continuously high aggregate demand
quickly results in sectoral bottlenecks. In order to maintain growth nevertheless,
the affected sectors try to attract workers from other sectors.
This approach to economic policy forces less productive companies doubly onto
the defensive: first, because of their poor cost and price structure they find them-
131
selves facing sales problems when demand is weak; second, the »solidarity wage
policy« exacerbates their already problematic cost and thus competitive situa-
tion because wage demands are asserted in all branches and all companies in
step with the development of average labour productivity. In direct contrast to
that, highly productive companies enjoy a twofold benefit: first, because of their
favourable cost situation and thus their favourable price structure they experi-
ence ample demand; second, wage settlements are deliberately calibrated so that
they do not entirely use up their margin for distribution. In this way, these com-
panies obtain a capital injection for the creation of new highly productive jobs.
Unemployment The losers from the combination of restrictive fiscal policy and solidarity wage
measures as a policy, therefore, are low productivity companies and those employed by them.
public adjustment The resulting unemployment was not understood defensively, as a public prob-
measure lem, but rather positively, as a public challenge, which has to be solved by a highly
developed active labour market policy. A comprehensive system of training and
mobility assistance is brought to bear in order to qualify the unemployed for
productive and, therefore, well-paid employment. In these terms, a restrictive
fiscal policy, solidarity wage policy and active labour market policy conspire to
achieve the constant renewal and structural adjustment of the Swedish economy
to the requirements of the global market.
This is also a good explanation for Sweden’s rapid export-based emergence from
crisis in the 1990s: because there was a well-developed active labour market pol-
icy and unions and management traditionally prefer creating high productivity
jobs to defending low productivity ones, innovation could be rapidly converted
into employment. Sweden increased – under favourable international economic
conditions – its export ratio in only five years by one-third, from 33 to 45 per cent.
Welfare State
Structural In the wake of post-War economic growth, Sweden found itself undergoing
developments in rapid restructuring, from a society characterised by poor workers and farmers
society called for to an ‘employee society’, fast reaping the benefits of private affluence. In the
a reorientation face of these developments in social structure, the policy of basic insurance –
of social policy for example, the same state pension for the king and a beggar – was strategi-
cally supplemented by the safeguarding of living standards (for example, by an
additional income-related pension) in order to mobilise voters and ensure that
political power was retained.
132
However, the Swedish welfare state does more to protect its citizens from
the basic contingencies of life than provide cash benefits. There is also a well-
developed public service system which provides care for children and the
elderly (virtually) free of charge, as well as health care and education services,
and training and qualification measures within the framework of labour mar-
ket policy. ‘Everyone pays their taxes in accordance with their income, and the
benefits which society provides rest more on the situation in which one finds
oneself than on the premiums one has paid. Benefits are not the result of deci-
sions taken on the market, but determined in the political process’ (Meidner/
Hedborg 1984: 56).
Given constant full employment, the rapid expansion of public services could Expansion of
be achieved, broadly speaking, only by activating women. In the period from public services
1960 to 1990, the employment rate of economically active Swedish women
rose from the European average of 50 per cent to a world-leading 83 per cent.
Pensions: The old pension system – state pension for all plus employment Pensions
income-related pension – was reformed in the 1990s in a `demography proof’
manner. Pension entitlements can now be taken up beginning between a per-
son’s sixty-first and sixty-seventh years. The tax-financed guaranteed pension
thus goes to those without or with inadequate employment income, not tak-
ing into account private assets. Employees pay a fixed contribution rate of 16
per cent for their (assessed) income-related pension and invest another 2.5
per cent in individual investment funds, from which a private premium pen-
sion is then paid.
133
This rate is paid for 200 days after the eighth day of unemployment, and then
reduced to 70 per cent for an unlimited period. Non-members receive a low
basic state benefit.
Social assistance Income support: In Sweden, income support is the responsibility of the Min-
istry for Health and Social Security, but it is organised by local authorities and
financed mainly by local taxes. The level of income support is set by the National
Board of Health and Welfare on the basis of a representative standard of living.
Health care system Health care system: All residents of Sweden have the right to medical care
almost free of charge. The system is run by the county councils and financed
mainly from direct income taxes. A small fee may be charged, varying from
county to county. Furthermore, all those earning more than 6,000 krona a
year are entitled to compensation for loss of earnings. Medical insurance is
financed by a mandatory employer’s contribution and insurance contributions,
paid in addition to taxes.
Universalistic Although, at present, Sweden has the highest tax ratio among the OECD coun-
principle tries, this does not mean that the welfare state is particularly costly. Americans
do not pay any less, privately, for security against the basic exigencies of life –
unemployment, illness, old age – than Swedes are required to pay in taxes and
social contributions. The decisive difference, however, is that in Sweden the
whole population is insured, while in the USA all those who cannot pay remain
outside the private insurance system.
134
Education System
Since the real ‘raw material’ of modern industrial and service societies consists Education system
of knowledge and its creative use, the education system is of strategic impor-
tance for the further development of a globalised economy. Sweden possesses
a well-developed, if not free kindergarten provision, while from pre-school to
university education can be accessed almost free of charge.
Education in Sweden is compulsory between the ages of 7 and 16, and all pupils
attend the (comprehensive) Grundskola. Around 90 per cent of Grundskola
graduates go on to the (non-compulsory) three-year Gymnasieskola. So-called
Högskola or ‘colleges’ are tertiary educational institutions and were made acces-
sible to all in the 1970s. Anyone capable of participating in the course of their
choice is admitted, as long as places are available; otherwise, they are put on a
waiting list, subject to various criteria. There is also a well-developed system of
adult education.
Based on the anchoring of positive and negative civil rights and liberties in the
Constitution, in Sweden fundamental rights are no mere formal shells but prac-
tical reality. Sweden can, therefore, be categorised as a highly inclusive social
democracy.
135
Sweden
Education: importance of
Proportion of students’ perfor-
socioeconomic background mance differences attributable to
10.6 % their socioeconomic background
for educational attainment
(source: OECD, 2007)
2006
Proportion of economically
Trade union density 2007 70.8 % active population organised in
trade unions (source: OECD)
136
6. IN CONCLUSION, A BEGINNING
What is the best way to conclude a reader on the foundations of social democ-
racy? One way of doing it would be to summarise the results, point out their
significance and let things stand for themselves. But that would represent
something of a cop out, since this volume has shown that social democracy
cannot simply be concluded, either as a conceptual model or as a political
task. On the contrary, the path of social democracy – both as an idea and as
political action – must repeatedly be tested, adapted and rethought, if it is to
be pursued successfully.
The debate on social democracy is distinguished by the fact that it does not stay
still, but keeps a close eye on societal developments, takes in risks and oppor-
tunities and then puts them to use politically. This marks out social democracy
from other political models: it neither clings to what has been handed down nor
is blind to changed realities and new challenges.
One of the central challenges of the coming years and decades will be how to
tackle globalisation. It harbours both risks and opportunities. Germany’s SPD
has taken up this challenge in its Hamburg Programme, which identifies tasks
arising from the essential issues of globalisation from the perspective of social
democracy:
137
Properly functioning capital and financial markets
‘A modern, globally interlinked national economy requires well-functioning
financial and capital markets. We want to tap the potential of capital markets
for qualitative growth. […]
Where financial markets seek only to generate short-term profits they jeopard-
ise enterprises’ long-term growth strategies, thereby destroying jobs. We want
to use tax and company law – among other things – to bolster investors who
seek long-term commitments instead of a quick profit. … With increasing inter-
national interlinking of commodity and financial markets, the urgency of their
international regulation becomes ever more pressing.’
(Hamburg Programme 2007: 47)
Decent work
‘Only if people have prospects which they can rely on can they fully develop their
talents and capabilities. Decent work combines flexibility and security. The pace
of scientific and technological progress, ever more rapid change in the world
of work and intensified competition require more flexibility. At the same time,
they offer more opportunities for personal development. … In order to combine
security and flexibility and to guarantee security in the course of change, we
want to develop a modern working time policy and to remodel unemployment
insurance as employment insurance. … But as much as flexibility may be both
necessary and desirable, it must not be abused. We want to bolster employment
that is permanent and subject to social insurance, and we want to do away with
precarious employment, so that workers are no longer unprotected.’
(Hamburg Programme 2007: 54f)
These points show that social democracy must constantly develop and address
new challenges, fully aware of its foundations and clear-eyed about reality.
138
We would like to invite you to participate in the debate on social democracy.
The Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung’s Academy of Social Democracy provides an
arena for this purpose. Eight seminar modules tackle the core values of social
democracy and their practical application:
F o un dat i o n s of S o c ial D e m o c ra c y
G lo bali s at io n an d S o c ial D e m o c ra c y
Eur o p e an d S o c ial D e m o c ra c y
Pea ce an d S o c ial D e m o c ra c y
www.fes-soziale-demokratie.de
139
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141
RECOMMENDED READING
The following recommendations are for all those who wish to study the founda-
Online Academy: tions of social democracy beyond the confines of this reader.
‘Social Democracy’
Module Social D emocrac y Reader s
__________________________________________________________
What are the roots
and values of social Vaut, Simon et al.:
SOCIAL DEMOCRACY READER 2
Economics and
Reader 2: Economics and Social Democracy. 2011.
Social Democracy
are their character- Division for International Cooperation,
istics? What kind Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
of practical policies (ISBN: 978-3-86872-698-5)
can serve as vehicles How can a modern, values-based social democratic eco-
for their implemen- nomic policy succeed? To what theories can an economic
tation given such policy based on freedom, justice and solidarity appeal?
ReaderDemokratie_II-03.indb 1-2 12.07.11 14:40
new challenges What principles underlie it? And above all: how can they be implemented in prac-
as globalisation tice? The Reader Economics and Social Democracy looks into these questions.
and demographic An important role is played by the theories of British economist John Maynard
change? These are Keynes. In turbulent economic times, in which many are still playing it by ear, it
some of the ques- is all the more important to make sure of one’s own (economic) policy course.
tions addressed by
SOCIAL DEMOCRACY READER 3
the ‘Social Democ- Petring, Alexander et al.:
Alexander Petring et al.
X www.fes-online-
akademie.de
142
History of Political Ideas
__________________________________________________________
Langewiesche, Dieter:
Liberalismus und Sozialismus. Ausgewählte Beiträge. 2003.
Verlag J. H. W. Dietz Nachf. (ISBN: 978-3-8012-4132-2)
In 17 essays, the prominent Tübingen historian Dieter Langewiesche examines
the dynamic and mutually influential history of the great social ideologies of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries – liberalism and socialism – in their cultural,
social and political context.
Foundations
__________________________________________________________
Meyer, Thomas:
Theory of Social Democracy. 2007 [original German edition: 2005].
Polity Press
Two powers are competing for influence in the globalised world: libertarian
democracy and social democracy. Thomas Meyer here expounds the theoretical
foundations of social democracy, which, alongside civil and political fundamen-
tal rights, also takes social and economic rights seriously.
143
Social democrac y in G ermany
__________________________________________________________
Eppler, Erhard:
Eine Partei für das zweite Jahrzehnt: die SPD? 2008.
vorwärts buch Verlag. (ISBN: 978-3-86602-175-4)
Erhard Eppler, SPD opinion-leader, has published a book that deals explicitly with
his party, its tasks and its opportunities. He provides a striking description of how
the market fundamentalist thought of the past quarter-century has changed
Europe and Germany. What remains is a German society whose sense of justice
is gravely injured and in which the gap between rich and poor has grown to such
an extent that a social rupture looms.
Gabriel, Sigmar:
Links neu denken. Politik für die Mehrheit. 2008.
(ISBN: 978-3-492-05212-2)
Sigmar Gabriel presents a political blueprint that rethinks what it means to be on
the left and releases it from a potentially fatal trap: to be either diluted beyond
recognition or to fall back onto obsolete old-left models. Majorities, accord-
ing to Gabriel, are won on the basis of substantive policies, not on the basis of
the arithmetic of power and endless coalition debates. He calls for a return to
politics that is something more besides endless power games and personality-
oriented debates.
144
So cial d e mo crac y in t he I nternational A r ena
__________________________________________________________
Krell, Christian:
Sozialdemokratie und Europa. Die Europapolitik von SPD,
Labour Party und Parti Socialiste. 2009.
VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften. (ISBN: 978-3-531-16498-4)
Who and what determine a party’s policy on Europe? To find an answer, Chris-
tian Krell compares the European policy of three national parties in the period
between 1979 and 2002: Germany’s SPD, the UK Labour Party and the French
Parti Socialiste. He identifies correspondences, but also clear differences, par-
ticularly between the three parties’ European integration strategies.
145
Hi stor y
__________________________________________________________
Dieter Dowe:
Von der Arbeiter- zur Volkspartei. Programmentwicklung der deutschen
Sozialdemokratie seit dem 19. Jahrhundert. Reihe Gesprächskreis Geschichte
2007, Heft 71 (http: / / library.fes.de /pdf-files/historiker /04803.pdf)
Dieter Dowe depicts the history of social democracy since the 1848 Revolution in
terms of both programmes and practice as an important part of the long-standing
and never-ending debate on a free, democratic and just order of state and society.
Grebing, Helga:
Geschichte der deutschen Arbeiterbewegung.
Von der Revolution 1848 bis ins 21. Jahrhundert. 2002.
vorwärts Verlag. ISBN: 978-3-86602-288-1
For years, political success has depended on the ability of parties to inspire con-
fidence in their labour market policies. What has long been lacking is a sustain-
able model for a future society beyond traditional employment. Affter all, people
must be ‘active’ in order to be able to live a decent life. What, therefore, would a
post-industrial Germany with enough work for all be like? And what is the task
of the labour movement and its political party, the SPD, in all this?
Schneider, Michael:
Kleine Geschichte der Gewerkschaften. Ihre Entwicklung in
Deutschland von den Anfängen bis heute. 2000.
Verlag J. H. W. Dietz Nachf. (ISBN: 978-3-8012-0294-1)
Michael Schneider presents a detailed and well-informed history of the trade
unions from their beginnings during industrialisation to contemporary challenges
in the age of globalisation.
146
20 key terms:
147
PRAISE FOR THE SERIES
‘The Social Democracy Readers present complex matters accessibly and concisely.
Who, what, how and, especially, for what reason: a compact overview which, in
the cut-and-thrust of everyday politics, is worth its weight in gold.’
Dianne Köster, trade union general secretary
‘Summing up, we can say that the authors have succeeded in their difficult
undertaking, writing a succinct treatment of the theoretical foundations of social
democracy in the form of a reader for a very heterogeneous target group. The
volume [Foundations of Social Democracy] is particularly impressive for the way
in which it handles the subject matter with a view to potential applications. It
deals transparently with the literature on which it draws and has an extensive
bibliography, many graphics, clearly identified intermediate steps, biographical
remarks on individual thinkers and, in particular, practically relevant programmatic
issues of contention from current debates. It provides, both as an accompaniment
to ASD seminars and independently, an initial guide to political thought and action.’
Michael Reschke, University of Kassel
(detailed review in Internationale Politik und Gesellschaft 2/2009)
148
‘The Economics and Social Democracy Reader is a big help for people who are
worried about whether what they experience in their “economic life” in their job
or as a consumer really tallies with what the Constitution means by “social state”.’
Josef Vogt, long-standing member of the SPD, IG-Metall and AWO
‘Social policy is debated passionately. Virtually no other issue gives rise to such
violent disagreement between political parties’ basic positions. [Social Democracy]
Reader 3: Welfare State and Social Democracy enables one to arm oneself for
these debates. It discusses a range of concepts of justice. It shows who wants
what kind of welfare state and explains what we can learn from the Scandinavian
welfare states. In the process, it becomes clear that any discussion about social
policy is also a discussion about distribution. Work, pensions, health care and
education/training have to be organised fairly and – today more than ever –
financed on a solidarity basis. Reader 3 also addresses these issues, both seriously
and comprehensibly.’
Sascha Vogt, deputy federal chair, Juso
149
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
150
Marc Herter (*1974) is the chair of the SPD council group in Hamm (West-
phalia). He is studying law at the University of Münster (Westfälischen
Wilhelms-Universität Münster). Since 2002 he has been a member of the Regional
Executive of the NRW-SPD, and since 2006 also of the regional party’s steering
committee.
Dr. Eun-Jeung Lee (*1963) is head of Korean Studies at the Free University,
Berlin, since 2008. She studied at Ehwa University in Seoul and at the Georg-
August University Göttingen, where she received her doctorate. In 2001, she
completed her habilitation at the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg and
taught there as an assistant professor. She was granted a research fellowship by
the Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung, and was a Fellow of the Japan Founda-
tion and Visiting Research Fellow at Chuo University in Tokyo. At present, she is
teaching in Germany and Korea.
Martin Timpe (*1978) is Federal Executive of the Young Socialist (Juso) uni-
versity groups and since 2007 has been a seminar leader at the Academy for
Social Democracy. He studied political science at the Otto-Suhr Institute of the
Free University Berlin.
152
Politics needs clear orientation: Only those who are able to state their goals
clearly will achieve them and inspire others. In keeping with this, this reader on the
Foundations of Social Democracy examines the meaning of social democracy in the
twenty-first century. What are its underlying values? What are its goals? How can
it be applied in practice?
The topics in this reader are oriented towards the seminars of the Academy for Social
Democracy. The Academy for Social Democracy was set up by the Friedrich-Ebert-
Stiftung to provide courses for people involved and interested in politics.
ISBN 978-3-86498-080-0