Full Description
When it was originally published in 1986, this was the first book to deal simultaneously with several aspects of social welfare provision in a developing country. The unique contribution of the book is based on the analysis of 3 substantive welfare areas - land (for self-help housing), urban infrastructure and health - which are examined in terms of the nature, motivation and effectiveness of government intervention. The book covers 3 administrations between 1970 and the mid-1980s and sets the analysis in the wider context of Latin American affairs. The author shows that although social welfare expenditure has increased, its importance as a government priority has been sharply eroded.
Contents
1.Economic Growth and Social Welfare Provision 2. 'Boom to bust': Mexico's Recent Economic Development 3. Politics, Government and Planning 4. Land Provision: An Effective Housing Policy? 5. The Politics and Costs of Service Provision 6. Health Care and Inequality 7. Social Welfare in Mexico: Papering over the Cracks?