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Conservatism and Tradition in Danish Social Welfare Legislation, 1890–1933: A Comparative View

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Daniel Levine
Affiliation:
Bowdoin College

Extract

Before Denmark finally achieved parliamentary democracy in 1901, it was already well on the way to becoming a thorough-going welfare state and was, until about the Second World War, a leader in developing the institutions and ideology of welfare capitalism. The contrast with the United States, where democratic political institutions are much older, but where welfare institutions have developed more slowly and in very different form, is striking. The two countries, of course, vary enormously in size and circumstances, but as with any industrializing nation, they have some things in common: cities, an urban poor, an organized demand for the passage of social welfare legislation. A comparative view may reveal aspects of each country in sharper perspective than an examination of either in isolation. The question is: How is it that welfare institutions were so much more intellectually available in Denmark than in the United States? The conclusion is that institutions of modern welfare capitalism in Denmark were designed to resemble as much as possible traditional pre-democratic—and pre-socialist—Danish institutions, and that the institutions were successful precisely because they did not require any break with historical continuity and fit so well into long-familiar traditions and habits of thought.

Type
Law and Legislation
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1978

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References

1 In this paper, the terms ‘social legislation’, ‘social welfare legislation’, and ‘welfare legislation’ are used interchangeably. The boundaries of the term are taken from Socialreformkommissionens Betsnkning, I., Det Social Tryghedssystem; Struktur og Dagpenge (1969).Google Scholar That report, the basis for the reforms of 1973, divides ‘social expenditures’ into seven categories: sickness, accident insurance and workers’ safety, old age and invalidity, unemployment, general aid, family and children's allowances, wounded military veterans. With the exception of the last two, not significant during the period, these are the categories here considered. The author gratefully acknowledges support from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, which made research for this article possible.

2 Rigsdagstidende, Landsting (hereafter cited as LT), 1888/9, October 13, 1888, cols. 69–79.Google Scholar

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4 Party names in Denmark are confusing. The party called ‘Right’ remained conservative. The party called ‘Left’ was, in the 1890s, a reform party. By the 1920s, however, other parties, particularly the ‘Radical Left’ and, further to the left, the ‘Social Democrats’, took over leadership of various reforms. The ‘Left’ kept its name, even though it stood near the conservative end of the political spectrum. The commission: Nedsat af Indenrigsministeren, July 4, 1885, til ‘Overvejelsen af Sporgsmaalene om Sygekassernes Ordning og om Arbejdernes Sikring mod Følgerne af Ulykkestilfaede under Arbejdet’, 21–2.

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8 LT 88/9, October 12, 1888, 46–53.

9 FT 25/6, January 13, 1926, 3291.

10 For example, the sickness societies began as purely private ventures, were for many years financed by a combination of private and public funds, and since 1973 have been totally publicly financed.

11 FT 90/1, December 21, 1890, 1783. See also Nils Neergaard, e.g., FT 89/90, November 11, 1889, 122–34. Geltzer's assumption and language are still used in the twentieth century. See Sabroe, Povl, ‘Abent Brev til Spare-Per’, Politiken, April 19, 1973, p. 11.Google Scholar

12 Though any one who received that help from the Poor Law Authority lost his vote.

13 Para. 50, clause 1.

14 Para. 52, clause 1. Italics in original.

15 That it was in fact taken for granted is shown by Klein as early as November 6, 1889. FT 89/90, 818.

16 Leth, FT 89/90, February 2, 1890, 2588–94. Formally, one could go to court if the minister acted illegally, but this right was virtually never used and was intended to correct cases of gross abuse of power, not simply differences in judgement.

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31 FT 24/25, December 12, 1924, 2614. The phrase ‘den gamle haandvaerks tid’ evoked associations of warm personal relationships between master and journeyman, lack of class feeling and pride in product. The reality was not necessarily so idyllic.Google Scholar

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37 The charity organization societies in England and America had precisely the goal of encouraging the poor to lift themselves up by their bootstraps. See Bremner, Robert H., From the Depths: The Discovery of Poverty in America (New York, 1956), pp. 4685;Google ScholarKusmer, Kenneth L., ‘The Functions of Organized Charity in the Progressive Era. Chicago as a Case Study’, Journal of American History, LX (12 1973), 657–79:CrossRefGoogle Scholar Kusmer emphasizes that charity workers sought a sense of community, but their implicit assumptions are readily apparent. Huggins, Nathan I., Protestants Against Poverty. Boston's Charities, 1870–1900 (Westport, 1971);Google ScholarPaine, Robert Treat Jr., ‘Address’, delivered at the Charity Building, March 12, 1879.Google Scholar

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42 Steincke, , Fremtidens Forsørgelsesvasen, 228–37. See election propaganda preserved in Arbejderbevægelsens Bibliotek og Arkiv.Google Scholar

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51 Hartz, Louis, The Liberal Tradition in America (New York, 1955).Google Scholar

52 Again, de Tocqueville contrasts America and at least France: Aristocracy links everybody, from peasant to king, in one long chain. Democracy breaks the chain and frees each link’, op. cit., vol. II, p. 99.Google Scholar

53 Glazer, Nathan, ‘The Limits of Social Policy’, Commentary, vol. 52, no. 3 (09 1971), 51–8.Google Scholar