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A New Kid in Town? Active Inclusion Elements in European Minimum Income Schemes

Sarah Marchal, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2017 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 1, pp 171-194
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In this paper, the authors assess the current variation in activation strategies directed towards able-bodied persons of working age relying on a minimum income guarantee in 19 EU member states and find that there are only few countries where the activation discourse has remained a dead letter.
Abstract
This article assesses the current variation in activation strategies directed towards able-bodied persons of working age relying on a minimum income guarantee in 19 EU member states. First, we argue that the active inclusion notion developed by the European Commission in its Recommendation on the active inclusion of persons excluded from the labour market provides a useful tool to categorize current activation strategies towards minimum income protection (MIP) recipients. Consequently, we assess the empirical viability of active inclusion strategies in a fuzzy set ideal type analysis of purpose-collected institutional data. We find that there are only few countries where the activation discourse has remained a dead letter. Most countries implement policy measures that aim to discourage benefit dependency among MIP recipients. Nevertheless, behind the realities of activation strategies towards MIP recipients seldom lies the notion of active inclusion as defined by the European Commission. Particularly, many countries focus predominantly on incentives to increase labour market participation rates of MIP recipients, rather than enabling measures.

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This item is the archived peer-reviewed author-version of:
A new kid in town? Active inclusion elements in European minimum income
schemes
Reference:
Marchal Sarah, Van Mechelen Natascha.- A new kid in town? Active inclusion elements in European minimum income
schemes
Social policy and administration - ISSN 0144-5596 - 51:1(2017), p. 171-194
Full text (Publisher's DOI): http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1111/SPOL.12177
To cite this reference: http://hdl.handle.net/10067/1289440151162165141
Institutional repository IRUA

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A new kid in town? Active inclusion elements in European minimum income schemes
Sarah Marchal
PhD fellow from the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO), Herman Deleeck Centre for
Social Policy, University of Antwerp
Natascha Van Mechelen
Herman Deleeck Centre for Social Policy, University of Antwerp
Version forthcoming in Social Policy and Administration
Abstract: This paper assesses the current variation in activation strategies directed towards
able-bodied persons of working age relying on a minimum income guarantee in 19 EU
Member States. First, we argue that the Active Inclusion notion developed by the European
Commission in its 2008 Recommendation on the active inclusion of persons excluded from
the labour market provides a useful tool to categorize current activation strategies towards
minimum income protection (MIP) recipients. Consequently we assess the empirical viability
of active inclusion strategies in a fuzzy set ideal type analysis of purpose-collected
institutional data. We find that there are only few countries where the activation discourse has
remained a dead letter. Most countries implement policy measures that aim to discourage
benefit dependency among MIP recipients. Nevertheless, behind the realities of activation
strategies towards MIP recipients seldom lies the notion of active inclusion as defined by the
European Commission. Particularly, many countries focus predominantly on incentives to
increase labour market participation rates of MIP recipients, rather than enabling measures.
Keywords: activation strategy, fuzzy set ideal type analysis, active inclusion, minimum
income schemes, EU social policy

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Introduction
In 2008, EU level interest in minimum income protection led to the publication of the
Recommendation on the active inclusion of persons excluded from the labour market
(henceforth the 2008 Recommendation) by the European Commission. Building on
accumulated expertise and consultations with relevant stakeholders (Frazer et al. 2010), the
2008 Recommendation lists the main policy instruments and domains deemed relevant for the
activation of this specific target group. These are structured around three pillars, i.e. adequate
income support, inclusive labour markets and access to affordable and quality services. This
paper asks whether the principles outlined in this policy document provide a useful extension
to common activation typologies for assessing variation in activation strategies directed at the
specific target group of minimum income protection (MIP) beneficiaries. To this end, we hold
the active inclusion principles against dimensions that have been identified as capturing
differences in activation types, before we embark on an empirical assessment of activation
strategies in 19 EU Member States’ MIP schemes, for January 2012.
This preoccupation is warranted in at least two perspectives. First, through its synthesis and
application of previously identified activation dimensions to the less well-studied target group
of MIP recipients, this paper contributes to the literature on the nature and diversity of
activation strategies in contemporary welfare states. Second, from a (European) policy
perspective, it is important to gauge to what extent Member States have embraced EU level
principles of activation (Graziano 2011, 2012) and, more in particular, the notion of active
inclusion in their policy design.
In the following section, we briefly discuss the principles outlined in the active inclusion
recommendation. Next, we assess whether and to what extent active inclusion represents a
different view on activation than previous assessments of activation types. We proceed by

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presenting the data and methodology used to assess the empirical variation in activation types
in Europe’s MIP schemes. The next section describes the variation on separate active
inclusion indicators over EU Member States. Finally, we assess the empirical viability of the
active inclusion principles by means of a fuzzy set ideal type analysis and conclude.
Active inclusion principles
The 2008 Recommendation combines a long-standing EU level interest in adequate MIP
schemes with a focus on common social policy objectives through economic growth and
increasing labour market participation (Vandenbroucke and Vleminckx 2011). It hence
simultaneously embraces the “activation” and the “protection” functions of minimum income
provisions and labour market policies directed towards those on a long distance from the
labour market.
First, the adequate income support pillar encourages Member States to “recognise the
individual’s basic right to resources and social assistance sufficient to lead a life that is
compatible with human dignity” (European Commission 2008: 12). However the 2008
Recommendation remains vague on the desired level of minimum income guarantees as well
as on issues related to coverage and take-up of assistance payments. The preconditions for
adequate income support included by the Commission mainly relate to the requirement for
persons whose condition renders them fit for work to remain available for the labour market
or vocational training, and to the necessity to provide incentives to seek employment.
The second pillar, inclusive labour markets, details that persons able to work should “receive
effective help to enter or re-enter and stay in employment that corresponds to their work
capacity” (European Commission 2008: 13). It urges Member States to provide for a broad
range of very different types of active labour market measures, including policies that raise

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the employability of the workforce and improve the accessibility and quality of jobs at the
bottom of the labour market. Member States are cautioned to “continually review the
incentives and disincentives resulting from tax and benefit systems, including the
management and conditionality of benefits and a significant reduction in high marginal
effective tax rates, in particular for those with low incomes”. The European Commission
hence encourages countries to equip benefit schemes with due availability criteria and job
search obligations.
Third, access to quality services is considered essential. A wide range of services is
considered necessary to help benefit recipients in getting their lives back on track, including
social assistance, housing support, childcare, health and care services. These services should
be affordable, readily available, and easily accessible for those in need.
Activation typologies
The widespread shift in government priorities from passive income support to activation and
investment (Weishaupt 2011), has led to an abundance of activation forms and instruments
(Barbier and Ludwig-Mayerhofer 2004; Eichhorst and Konle-Seidl 2008). Scholars have
sought to reduce this diversity into a number of well-defined activation dimensions, to gauge
the specific nature of activation across countries and over time (see, among others, Van
Berkel and Hornemann Moller 2002; Weishaupt 2011).
Given their different focus and research question, the resulting characterizations tend to differ
on various accounts, including the precise definition of activation. Yet, especially more
instrument-oriented classifications do share a focus on the distinction between ending benefit
dependency through labour market participation versus human capital formation as two
different approaches to activation (Torfing 1999; Barbier and Ludwig-Mayerhofer 2004;

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The Political Economy of Active Labor-Market Policy:

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that Denmark has recently seen a significant drop in unemployment that has not been matched by any corresponding increase in inflation, and assume that this remarkable achievement is rooted in the ongoing transition from the Keynesian welfare state (KWS) to a Schumpeterian workfare regime (SWR).
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Between workfare and enablement – The different paths to transformation of the welfare state: A comparative analysis of activating labour market policies

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