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State-Level Public Policy as a Predictor of Individual and Family Well-Being

 

作者: ZimmermanShirleyL.,  

 

期刊: Women&Health  (Taylor Available online 1988)
卷期: Volume 12, issue 3-4  

页码: 161-188

 

ISSN:0363-0242

 

年代: 1988

 

DOI:10.1300/J013v12n03_09

 

出版商: Taylor&Francis Group

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

This exploratory study examines the relationship between state-level public policy and individual and family well-being and factors that affect it. The inquiry, based on exchange and choice theories, assumes that state-level public policy reflects stats' awareness of the needs of individuals and families, their ability to predict the future in failing to meet them, and the extent to which the norm of reciprocity prevails in the 50 states. Measures of stats' collective choices were states' per capita expenditures for public welfare, education, and health, and per capital taxes in 1980; measures of states' individual and well-or ill-being, or social malaise, were states' teenage birthrates, infant death rates, and suicide rates. Taken into account as antecedent and intervening variables were age, gender, and racial composition, income distribution, marital, socioeconomic, and employment status of states' populations, and attitudes toward public spending. The findings how the higher stat expenditures for public welfare and for education indeed contribute to individual and family well-being as measured by lower state rates of suicide and teenage births. States per captia spending for education, which together will state per captia spending for public welfare was a positive predictor of school completion rates and positively associated with state's income level, accounted for almost all of the variance in states' per capita taxes. State spending for public welfare was not a predictor of state per capita taxes. The findings are cause for considerable concern given the reduced role of the federal government in human affairs, particularly in states whose choices violate the assumptions underlying exchange and choice theories and the norm of reciprocity which says that people should help, not hurt, others.

 

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