초록
영어
This study attempts to examine social investment policies in the U.K. focusing on the aging population. In Korea, the incumbent administration implements welfare policies as a continuation of Rho, Mu-hyeon administration’s social investment policies – an aspect that is considered as well. The existing studies on social investment policies focally dealt with future generation such as young people and or their education/job activation programs. However, this study intends to consider 'Aging' as a social risk as well, and it reviewes the social investment policies for older people based on the case of U.K. First, this study explains the historical and theoretical background of social investment policies. Secondly, reviews are made to understand social issues related to aging population among new social risks. As a main part, social investment policies sought by the New Labor Party are analyzed from three aspects: pension, employment, and care policies for older people. In short, this study stress that issues related to older people can be approached through a social investment perspective. The welfare system of U.K as liberalism should pursue the harmony between central leftists' goals and market-friendly tools, so the structural gap was a determining factor about the policy success. Korea society needs to consider such actual problems, going beyond ideological conflicts.
목차
Ⅰ. Introduction
Ⅱ. Literature review: theory and background
1. The background and characteristic of Social investment
2. the features of the ‘social investment state’
3. Emergence of new social risks
4. New social risk and ageing population
5. Ageing and social investment strategy
Ⅲ. Social investment policy by welfare regime
1. Conservative welfare countries social investment strategies
2. Social investment strategies in social democratic welfare countries
3. Social investment strategies in Liberalistic social welfare countries
Ⅳ. Social investment policy for older people in case of UK
1. Pension: Income security
2. Labour: New Deal 50+
3. Care: Elderly and Long term care
Ⅴ. Conclusion
References