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4 - Social insurance in the modern welfare state: emergence, maturity and partial dismantling

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 July 2009

Marcus Radetzki
Affiliation:
Stockholms Universitet
Marian Radetzki
Affiliation:
Luleå Tekniska Universitet, Sweden
Niklas Juth
Affiliation:
Göteborgs Universitet, Sweden
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Summary

Introduction

The rapid progress of genetic science has little bearing on the collective and obligatory social insurance systems that have been built up to cover the costs of illness and disability, to assure the household's income levels in the event of the breadwinner's premature death, and to provide for a pension during old age. The reason is that these systems do not differentiate between the insured according to individual risks. The entire collective is provided with the same extent of cover, while premiums and benefits are regularly differentiated on the basis of income not of risk. But circumstances are changing, as the public systems are restructured and partially dismantled. Developments during the 1990s have comprised some privatisation of social insurance, while those parts that remain in the public domain have been individualised and exposed to competition in considerable measure. We claim that, to function properly, the structure that is now evolving will be forced to differentiate the premiums it charges, or the comprehensiveness of cover it offers, in accordance with individual risks. At the same time, genetic science is making progress in strides. As shown in chapter 2, there are still important uncertainties about the ultimate potential of genetics for determining individual insurance risks. In that chapter, therefore, we juxtapose a cautious versus a bold scenario in this regard.

Type
Chapter
Information
Genes and Insurance
Ethical, Legal and Economic Issues
, pp. 49 - 63
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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