6533b829fe1ef96bd128afb5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Retuning the Nordic Welfare Municipality: Central Regulation of Social Care under Change in Finland

Teppo Kröger

subject

CentralisationEconomic growthSociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectCorporate governanceContext (language use)Welfare stateta5142DecentralizationService (economics)Development economicsEconomicsNordic modelGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceWelfaremedia_common

description

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to analyse the changes that have taken place in the central regulation of social care in Finland since the 1970s. The changes in vertical central‐local relations are discussed in the context of economic and welfare state development.Design/methodology/approach – The paper is a case study, applying the concept of “the Nordic welfare municipality” to the case of Finland. With this concept, the author refers to the inherently contradictory character of the Nordic model of welfare governance: to a system that emphasises local self‐government but that, at the same time, perceives regional harmonisation as imperative.Findings – After strong central control during the most intensive construction period of the Finnish welfare state in the 1970s and 1980s, a radical decentralisation reform was implemented in 1993. However, since the early 2000s pressure for centralisation has increased again as emerging regional inequalities in care service provisions came under criticism.Ori...

10.1108/01443331111120591https://doi.org/10.1108/01443331111120591