Health and Social Welfare Review Vol.21 No.1, pp.3-66
Abstract
Since the mid-1990's, developed countries in the West, in cooperation with non-profit NGOs, have been creating social jobs in the third sector as part of their strenuous efforts to resolve the problems of unemployment and poverty and to increase the quality of life in communities across the region. Varied though types and functions of their social jobs may be, these countries share the common trend of tackling the problems of poverty and unemployment not only by drawing upon the workings of labor markets, but also by making progressive efforts to create employment in new sectors with high potential social utility. This trend is further embodied in the National Action Plan against Poverty and Social Exclusion launched recently in European Union. Social jobs in the Western countries are being created in many areas including environmental protection, cultural service, and welfare service, all pursuing social utility and public interest rather than profitability. These endeavors are underpinned by several support systems conducive to creating a climate for creating social employment (Emplois Sociaux), thereby helping the unemployed poor escape from poverty. Two among these stand out. First, these countries have solidified the legal groundwork to establish and bolster the status of social enterprises. Second, they have established the wherewithal?Ethic Bank, for instance?necessary to create social enterprises. It may of course be difficult for us to immediately identify and draw lessons for Korea from this Western experiment. Some of the results do, however, have significant implications for us as Korea continuously pushes ahead with its self-support projects geared toward creating social employment. Thus, this study aims to extract implications for Korea's national anti-poverty policy from the Western experiment and examine potentials and adverse effects thereof.