While a framework of statist welfare practices was constructed in the 1930s, the principles that underwrote it—and that defined the interaction of individual citizens and state agencies—were changed as a consequence of World War II and transformed as a result of Stalin’s death and the onset of de-Stalinization. Following a major sequence of welfare reforms in the Khrushchev period, most people’s encounters with social risk were substantially minimized. By the Brezhnev era, problems associated with moral hazard were creating new challenges for policy makers: not only did people enjoy the right to a job, as they had done for decades, but perverse incentives discouraged innovation and, for some, hard work. A welfare system had been established...
Russia’s transition to a market economy dramatically changed the country’s socio-economic landscape....
Paper presented at the November 1961 meeting of the Southern Economic Association in Atlanta, Georgi
Why has old-age security become less solidaristic and increasingly tied to risky capitalist markets?...
The welfare state is a deliberately designed political and legal social institution that allows a m...
Russia’s transition to a market economy has been accompanied by serious, and in some ways unanticipa...
Examining the reform process of the old age pension system in Russia, from its Soviet origins to the...
Abstract: This article examines the economic and social transformation oc-curring in post-communist ...
The abstract, table of contents, and first twenty-five pages are published with permission from the ...
This article investigates welfare and living standards in the Soviet Union during the great crises o...
This article examines the economic and social transformation occurring in post-communist societies, ...
none1noA Welfare State without Welfare. Teachers, Employees, Workers and Peasants in the Social Secu...
This article is unique in that, for the first time, Russian and Soviet social security development i...
Bönker K. Perestroika and the Loss of Certainties: The Post-Soviet Revaluation of Soviet Money Pract...
It shows how the welfare states that we have inherited from the early post-war years had one main ob...
This chapter considers pension protection and social services in the post-Soviet space as forms of s...
Russia’s transition to a market economy dramatically changed the country’s socio-economic landscape....
Paper presented at the November 1961 meeting of the Southern Economic Association in Atlanta, Georgi
Why has old-age security become less solidaristic and increasingly tied to risky capitalist markets?...
The welfare state is a deliberately designed political and legal social institution that allows a m...
Russia’s transition to a market economy has been accompanied by serious, and in some ways unanticipa...
Examining the reform process of the old age pension system in Russia, from its Soviet origins to the...
Abstract: This article examines the economic and social transformation oc-curring in post-communist ...
The abstract, table of contents, and first twenty-five pages are published with permission from the ...
This article investigates welfare and living standards in the Soviet Union during the great crises o...
This article examines the economic and social transformation occurring in post-communist societies, ...
none1noA Welfare State without Welfare. Teachers, Employees, Workers and Peasants in the Social Secu...
This article is unique in that, for the first time, Russian and Soviet social security development i...
Bönker K. Perestroika and the Loss of Certainties: The Post-Soviet Revaluation of Soviet Money Pract...
It shows how the welfare states that we have inherited from the early post-war years had one main ob...
This chapter considers pension protection and social services in the post-Soviet space as forms of s...
Russia’s transition to a market economy dramatically changed the country’s socio-economic landscape....
Paper presented at the November 1961 meeting of the Southern Economic Association in Atlanta, Georgi
Why has old-age security become less solidaristic and increasingly tied to risky capitalist markets?...