id,name,description,createdAt,updatedAt,datasetId,additionalInfo,link,dataPublishedBy 611,Lindert_OECD_Old (2004),"{""link"": ""http://www.worldcat.org/title/growing-public-social-spending-and-economic-growth-since-the-eighteenth-century/oclc/799512151&referer=brief_results"", ""retrievedDate"": ""01/04/2017"", ""additionalInfo"": ""Lindert (2004) makes a distinction between social transfers and total social expenditure. He defines total social expenditure as social transfers plus public expenditure on education. However, the OECD Social Expenditure Database (SOCX) does not include expenditure on education.\n\nAccording to Lindert (2004), total social transfers correspond to basic assistance to poor families [alias “poor relief” (before 1930), “family assistance,” “welfare” (in America), or “supplemental income”], unemployment compensation, (alias “the dole”), public non-contributory pensions (in which the funds come from persons other than the recipient and his or her employer), public health expenditures, and housing subsidies."", ""dataPublishedBy"": ""Lindert, Peter H., Growing Public: Social Spending and Economic Growth since the Eighteenth Century. Vol. 1 – The Story, Cambridge University Press, 2004."", ""dataPublisherSource"": ""OECD (1985), \""Social Expenditure 1960-1990: problems of growth and control\"", OECD social policy studies""}",2017-05-17 23:43:23,2017-11-02 13:04:39,3007,"Lindert (2004) makes a distinction between social transfers and total social expenditure. He defines total social expenditure as social transfers plus public expenditure on education. However, the OECD Social Expenditure Database (SOCX) does not include expenditure on education. According to Lindert (2004), total social transfers correspond to basic assistance to poor families [alias “poor relief” (before 1930), “family assistance,” “welfare” (in America), or “supplemental income”], unemployment compensation, (alias “the dole”), public non-contributory pensions (in which the funds come from persons other than the recipient and his or her employer), public health expenditures, and housing subsidies.",http://www.worldcat.org/title/growing-public-social-spending-and-economic-growth-since-the-eighteenth-century/oclc/799512151&referer=brief_results,"Lindert, Peter H., Growing Public: Social Spending and Economic Growth since the Eighteenth Century. Vol. 1 – The Story, Cambridge University Press, 2004."