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The Evolution of Welfare Production Regimes in East Asia: A Comparative Study of Korea, Japan, and Taiwan

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Authors

Lee, Seung-yoon Sophia

Issue Date
2011
Publisher
Graduate School of Public Administration, Seoul National University
Citation
Korean Journal of Policy Studies, Vol.26 No.1, pp. 49-75
Keywords
East Asian welfare production regimesdualistic welfare production regimefunctional equivalencehistorical institutionalismvarieties of capitalism
Abstract
This study examines the evolution of a dualistic welfare production regime in Korea and Japan, with Taiwan as a contrasting case. It examines how institutions evolved during the industrialization period in the three countries.
Taking the view of historical institutionalism, the Varieties of Capitalism
approach (Hall & Soskice, 2001) provided theoretical grounds for analyzing the
variation of welfare production regimes in East Asia. The study argues that historical
events (in Japan, the end of World War II and the Allied occupation; in Korea, the influx of foreign aid followed by the Korean War and the military government; in Taiwan, the defeat of the Kuomintang and ethnic divisions) created a critical juncture for these countries institutional developments. Korea and Japan developed large-company-oriented welfare production regimes, while Taiwans regime was more small and medium size enterprises (SMEs)-oriented.
The dualistic welfare production regime of large companies and small and medium size enterprises (SMEs) in Korea and Japan is further explained by the functional
equivalent welfare system that developed together with each countrys production regime.
ISSN
1225-5017
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/75561
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