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18 pages in length. Policy change has come to represent a considerable component of contemporary welfare systems across the world. Social welfare policies must be looked at from a communal perspective, leaving out the socially and economically destructive aspects that are intrinsic to private interests. The manner by which such components of social policy should be analyzed is by way of understanding how social welfare allocations are inextricably connected from within the economic marketplace and what such implications mean for the overall, larger picture. The writer discusses various components of Japan and Britain's welfare systems. Bibliography lists 20 sources.
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18 pages (~225 words per page)
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the poor to be healthy, they must have health care. To obtain adequate health care, they need a combination of education to keep themselves well in the first place
and access to a facility when they do become ill. For the poor to find work as a means by which to pay for continued health care (when the
government cannot or will not step in), they must be gainfully employed; however, in order to acquire and maintain employment, "they must be healthy, educated and skilled" (Biewen, 1996, p.
PG), which is why healthier workers add greatly to increased productivity and income. Attacking poverty at its very core is a viable option to the existence of global welfare
systems, inasmuch as if there is reduced indigence, there will be reduced consequences of poverty-related issues. Policy change has come to represent a
considerable component of contemporary welfare systems across the world; inasmuch as Britains family policy, for example, "developed within a male breadwinner logic" (Fraser, 1996, p. 792), the need for change
has been both extensive and perpetual in nature. Social welfare policies must be looked at from a communal perspective, leaving out the socially and economically destructive aspects that are
intrinsic to private interests. The manner by which such components of social policy should be analyzed is by way of understanding how social welfare allocations are inextricably connected from
within the economic marketplace and what such implications mean for the overall, larger picture, inasmuch as "the social market contains both a public and a private sector" (Gilbert et al,
1997, p. 57). Three primary values - equality, equity and adequacy - reflect the fundamental basis upon which the design of policy is established, further pointing out how when
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