Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Note on illustrations
- 1 Introduction: federalism and the welfare state
- Part 1 New World experiences
- Part 2 European experiences
- 5 Austria: strong parties in a weak federal polity
- 6 Germany: co-operative federalism and the overgrazing of the fiscal commons
- 7 Switzerland: the marriage of direct democracy and federalism
- Part 3 Conclusion
- Index
7 - Switzerland: the marriage of direct democracy and federalism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Note on illustrations
- 1 Introduction: federalism and the welfare state
- Part 1 New World experiences
- Part 2 European experiences
- 5 Austria: strong parties in a weak federal polity
- 6 Germany: co-operative federalism and the overgrazing of the fiscal commons
- 7 Switzerland: the marriage of direct democracy and federalism
- Part 3 Conclusion
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Swiss federalism shares attributes with both United States and German federalism. As in the United States, an essential goal of the federalist project is to allow for differences in living conditions among the constituent territorial units. When the Swiss cantons formed a federal state in 1848, they did so on the basis of a constitutional structure that was designed to allow for diversity of social, economic and political organization at the cantonal level. On the other hand, Swiss federalism is hardly competitive. As in Germany, cantons co-operate with each other, and above all the federal government co-operates with the cantons because it relies on their administration for the implementation of most policies. Finally, as in both the US and Germany, the emergence of national social security systems has shifted power and resources from the local and the state to the federal level.
Unsurprisingly, this peculiar institutional context has contributed to the shaping of social policy over the years. Overall, we can identify three different forces underlying the territorial dimension of the Swiss welfare state and working in different directions: first, a unifying and centralizing force related to the rise of the national welfare state in response to the imperatives of industrialization and societal modernization in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; second, a unifying – but not centralizing – force arising from the co-operation of cantonal and local administrations with a fiscally and politically weak central government; and, third, a force of diversity and decentralization stemming from the combination of cantonal competencies with different resources, polities, politics and policies.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Federalism and the Welfare StateNew World and European Experiences, pp. 263 - 304Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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