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Back to the future: the history of the British welfare state 1834–2024

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Article

Goldman, Lawrence

Oxford Review of Economic Policy

2025

41

1

Spring

12-27

welfare state ; social protection ; history

United Kingdom

Social protection

https://doi.org/10.1093/oxrep/graf003

English

Bibliogr.

"The history of the British welfare state was once written as a story of progress from small and unsympathetic beginnings in the early nineteenth century. This paper argues that versions of the demographic, medical, and welfare issues of that period still affect us in comparable ways, two centuries after the infamous New Poor Law of 1834. The history of the British welfare state is captured here by examining three periods of its accelerated development in the 1830s, 1900s, and 1940s, and in the work of key thinkers and policy-makers associated with each of these phases: Jeremy Bentham and Edwin Chadwick in the first; David Lloyd George and Charles Booth in the second; and William Beveridge and Aneurin Bevan in the third. The contradictions between the respective plans of Beveridge and Bevan that have shaped the modern welfare state lie at the heart of the welfare system's problems today."

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