09
May 14

Social Policy Interventions and Health

It’s a breath of fresh air to read this so soon after reading about austerity. In fact, it seems like the CCT programs are the near opposite of austerity. If austerity is a direct cut to health programs in order to preserve economic standing, CCT programs in Latin American countries are an indirect way to improve health conditions by bolstering the economic standing of the poor at taxpayer’s expense. I can understand some reasons why a program like this would not take off in America – the heavy influence of conservatives and the stigma against welfare recipients, for example – although the reading did indicate that such policies were implemented in New York, despite facing opposition on two sides. The conservative criticisms of Opportunity NYC made me laugh, given how predictably out-of-touch-with-reality the critics revealed themselves to be with their statements. However, I do think that the liberal critics had a point. I think that when you offer people rewards based on certain “behaviors”, you walk a fine line that could eventually fall into respectability politics. What is a “good” welfare recipient? Who is deserving of aid and who is not, even though they’re all poor and starving? How soon until the conditionalities start to become subtly dictated by race, gender, sexuality, and class? While the Brazilian and Mexican CCT programs showed intense amuonts of generosity, all it takes is one corrupt program director to turn everything on its head.

This is an even more legitimate fear, in my opinion, when you consider that in “developed countries” such as ours, availability of healthcare has little to do with health equality. The example they gave, for example, of New Jersey Asian women living to 91 and Dakotan Native American men living to 58. The reasons behind this are easily uncovered through a quick game of Oppression Olympics. Comparing the treatment of Native Americans historically to that of Asian Americans will tell you all you need to know. So in America, where so many policies are dictated by racist, sexist, homophobic, or transphobic ideology on a subtextual level, would CCT programs be able to take hold without also being dictated by such prejudices, especially with the anti-Blackness and misogynoir that has taken root in American welfare discussions since the Reagan era? It would probably require a complete refocusing of welfare and how we as a nation view it. But we’d have to get past the conservatives on that one.


04
May 14

The Body Economic

Throughout these past few semesters, I have developed, in my admitted ignorance, an idea of how a government should best assist and service the citizens that pay it tribute. Many of the people that ebb and flow through the periphery of our existences have had their lives and their paths significantly altered by “chance.” These alterations are not those of a tailor. They fail to make our lives more snug and comfortable. These alterations are most always detrimental to our standard and quality of life. And that is where the government should come in. It should be the place of the government to mitigate the negative effects of “chance” on the life of its citizen. The government should have the social services in place to care for a person when disease strikes or when a company is forced to downsize. It should be the aim of a government to guide the growth of a society to overall comfort, health and contentment, despite the wrenches that are constantly thrown recklessly into peoples’ lives.

There is one aspect of our current government policies that incessantly nags at me, and ceaselessly antagonizes and harasses the ideal above. Instead of helping those in need, those who are vulnerable and weak and whose lives have been “altered,” the government has a track record that is truly something to be ashamed of. Yet, if neglect were the only issue, I would not be as bothered as I am now. Our current policies seem to go out of their way to accentuate poverty and disability. The policies seem to undermine the entire purpose of government, not only impairing the ability of our nation to succeed, but crippling our growth. It is not realistic for us to aspire to Sweden’s active labor market policies. Our population is approximately 34 times that of Sweden’s and unless everyone wants to pay taxes that are astronomically higher, we have find another way. And that, I think, is the idea being espoused by The Body Economic. Our government leaders must investigate the paths that create healthy societies. They cannot let their egos and their prejudices get in the way of facts and data. They must set aside their party lines and do the deed they were elected to do—what’s best for the American people.


02
May 14

Body Economic Part 3

After finishing The Body Economic, I am rather convinced that the authors Stuckler and Basu are right. In each part- in each chapter even- we are given more and more examples of how austerity and budget cuts are harmful to societies while actually helping the people is not. In the third part of the book, we see Sweden’s social protection plan, the Active Labor Market Program, which actively helped the unemployed get back on track. It’s no wonder that programs like this would be beneficial. We have already seen how unemployment/ not making much money can negatively affect people mentally and emotionally, leading to depression and in some cases, suicide. And with people who are already feeling down in the dumps, having someone to hold their hand and help them up can sometimes be the only option. It’s amazing to see that social protection programs were the reason why “unemployment spikes had no correlation with increased suicides in Sweden, Finland, and Iceland, but unemployment was strongly correlated to suicide in Spain, the US, Greece, Italy and Russia”(118). It almost seems too perfect for the authors’ arguments that the economic situation in so many different countries prove their points, especially since for each one, the authors bring lots of statistics, as well as personal stories.