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Some Recent British White Papers1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2013
Extract
The Beveridge, Scott, and Uthwatt reports are all concerned with the widening framework of governmental action within which our free enterprise system operates. None of them is revolutionary. The Scott report has even been called reactionary. The Beveridge and Uthwatt reports are based on a generation of practical experience. In their attempt to infuse a few clear principles into future policy, these two great reports, in their different ways, point towards greater order and system, the smoothing away of anomalies, the filling in of gaps. Procedures which have served certain categories of people or certain localities, they attempt to make universally and equally available to all people or to all localities. They mark a decisive step in the passage from the fragmentariness that is inseparable from experiment to the universality that is characteristic of good government.
Sir William Beveridge's plan for social security is nothing less than an attempt to abolish want by redistributing income. He assumes that society has somehow to pay the cost of privation in any case, and therefore might as well do so consciously and deliberately through the instrumentality of government.
- Type
- Foreign Government and Politics
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © American Political Science Association 1943
References
1 William H. Beveridge, Social Insurance and Allied Services: Report (New York: The Macmillan Company. 1942. Pp. 300. $1.00.)
Ministry of Works and Planning, Report of the Committee on Land Utilization in Rural Areas (New York: British Information Service. 1942. Pp. vi, 138. $0.50.)
Ministry of Works and Planning, Expert Committee on Compensation and Betterment: Final Report (New York: British Information Service. 1942. Pp. vi, 180. $0.65.)
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