Austerity Research Group
Austerity Research Group
The Austerity Research Group is a multidisciplinary research collaboration promoting a series of links between academic and non-academic researchers who can contribute to understanding the impact austerity has on society and groups and institutions within it, how austerity provokes resistance, how political elites seek to manage the turn to austerity and, if they do so successfully, the passive acceptance of its ramifications through political disengagement and malaise.
Participants in the project include faculty and graduate students from diverse disciplines including: Political Science, Anthropology, Economics, Labour Studies, Social Work and Globalization.
What is Austerity?
Defined as “the quality or state of being austere” and “enforced or extreme economy,” set off enough searches that Merriam-Webster named it as its Word of the Year for 2010. After initially experimenting with stimulus policies as a response to the global economic crisis, international organizations like the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have all called for austerity, with the IMF predicting that two decades of ‘fiscal consolidation’ may be necessary.
British Prime Minister Cameron proclaimed an age of austerity, and a correspondent in the New Statesman declared that “Austerity is the new normal. It is not a temporary phenomenon. It will become permanent. Fiscal conservatism is the order of the day.” Of course, predictions of permanent austerity may prove unfounded. However, there is little doubt that the politics and policy of austerity is likely to be a feature of global and Canadian political economy and society for the foreseeable future.
Austerity begins at the government level with a focus on cost-reduction and off-loading of responsibilities to sub-national jurisdictions and, through privatization, to individual citizens. Much of budgetary burden of austerity is likely to be found in the social policy portfolios, broadly defined, which means that the direct impact of austerity measures will first be felt by beneficiaries of such programs. However, it is likely that austerity will have an impact, probably corrosive, on social cohesion , social relations more generally, on political practices. The impact and consequences of the drive to austerity thus requires a multidimensional and multidisciplinary analysis.
The implications of austerity go far beyond the politics of balanced budgets, tax reductions and their negative social consequences. Democratic and public life is being diminished, public spaces eroded, and people conditioned not only to expect less in material terms but to count less, and participate less as citizens. Society and the sense of community, of belonging to a collective enterprise are being hollowed out and replaced by individualism and fragmentation in the face of crisis. In this context austerity is a means of conditioning people to live more limited and restricted lives.
Austerity Research Group Members
Michelle L. Dion Learn More
Professor, Senator William McMaster Chair in Gender & Methodology
Kenneth Taylor Hall (KTH), 533
Phone: 905-525-9140, ext. 24029 Email: dionm@mcmaster.ca
Peter Graefe Learn More
Associate Professor
Kenneth Taylor Hall (KTH), 512
Phone: (905) 525-9140, ext. 27716 Email: graefep@mcmaster.ca
Steven McBride Learn More
Professor, Canada Research Chair in Public Policy and Globalization
Kenneth Taylor Hall (KTH), 529
Phone: (905) 525-9140, ext. 23707 Email: mcbride@mcmaster.ca
Robert O’Brien Learn More
Professor
Kenneth Taylor Hall (KTH), 519
Phone: (905) 525-9140, ext. 24743
Email: obrienr@mcmaster.ca
Petra Rethmann Learn More
Professor, Director & Graduate Advisor of Institute on Globalization & the Human Condition (IGHC)
L.R. Wilson Hall, 2020
Phone: (905) 525-9140, ext. 26259 Email: rethman@mcmaster.ca
Yanqiu Rachel Zhou Learn More
Professor, Health, Aging & Society
Phone: (905) 525-9140, ext. 23787
Email: zhoura@mcmaster.ca