In the early 1990s, the countries of the former Soviet Bloc
faced an urgent need to reform the systems by which they delivered
broad, basic social welfare to their citizens. Inherited systems
were inefficient and financially unsustainable. Linda J. Cook here
explores the politics and policy of social welfare from 1990 to
2004 in the Russian Federation, Poland, Hungary, Belarus, and
Kazakhstan.
Most of these countries, she shows, tried to institute reforms
based on a liberal paradigm of reduced entitlements and subsidies,
means-testing, and privatization. But these proposals provoked
opposition from pro-welfare interests, and the politics of
negotiating change varied substantially from one political arena to
another. In Russia, for example, liberalizing reform was blocked
for a decade. Only as Vladimir Putin rose to power did the country
change its inherited welfare system.
Cook finds that the impact of economic pressures on welfare was
strongly mediated by domestic political factors, including the
level of democratization and balance of pro- and anti-reform
political forces. Postcommunist welfare politics throughout Russia
and Eastern Europe, she shows, are marked by the large role played
by bureaucratic welfare stakeholders who were left over from the
communist period and, in weak states, by the development of
informal processes in social sectors.
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