Dietz Tracy L, Castora Melissa
Department of Sociology, University of Central Florida, Orlando 32816, USA.
Care Manag J. 2005 Winter;6(4):203-11. doi: 10.1891/cmaj.6.4.203.
Using data from the General Social Survey the current study examines period and cohort differences in attitudes toward welfare state spending for old age programs. Using the Torres-Gil classification system, the study uses cross-sectional data from the 1984-2004 waves of data to identify any differences by period and cohort group membership in whether or not it is the government's responsibility to provide a decent standard of living for older adults, whether or not respondents felt that the current level of spending for Social Security was adequate, and whether or not respondents were willing to make sacrifices such as paying higher taxes to pay for greater retirement benefits. The findings suggest that the generational conflict that many suggested might arise has not come to fruition. Indeed, the youngest cohorts in these analysis were the most likely to support higher taxes to pay for better retirement benefits. Perhaps more interesting were the findings that there were no significant period effects for whether or not the government was responsible for providing a decent standard of living but there were such effects when examining whether or not Social Security funding levels were adequate.
本研究利用综合社会调查的数据,考察了不同时期和不同队列对老年福利项目支出的态度差异。该研究采用托雷斯 - 吉尔分类系统,运用1984年至2004年各轮数据的横截面数据,以确定不同时期和队列群体在以下方面是否存在差异:政府是否有责任为老年人提供体面的生活水平;受访者是否认为当前社会保障支出水平足够;以及受访者是否愿意做出诸如缴纳更高税收以换取更高退休福利等牺牲。研究结果表明,许多人认为可能出现的代际冲突并未出现。事实上,这些分析中最年轻的队列最有可能支持提高税收以换取更好的退休福利。或许更有趣的是,研究结果显示,在政府是否有责任提供体面生活水平这一问题上不存在显著的时期效应,但在考察社会保障资金水平是否足够时则存在此类效应。