Abstract
Changing established systems of government entitlement is a thorny
proposition, even for popular states with sturdy holds on the reigns of
power. The Russian Federation, in the throes of a severe economic
downturn, extreme political instability and social crisis, has nonetheless
altered the official stance toward forms of entitlement from the previous
regime. Benefits cut from the ‘social contract’ have included
guaranteed
employment, free post-secondary education and access to state-subsidized
apartments, in attempts to redefine the lines of authority and responsibility
between citizens and the state. Other lines of responsibility appear
sacrosanct. The Soviet pension system, more specifically the old age and
service pensions, remains in place, but with extreme delays in payment,
poor indexing to the cost of living and high levels of tax evasion.In this article I examine the ways in which both the legacy of Soviet
pension policies and post-1991 economic and social trends have
constrained policy options concerning pension reform, particularly in
reference to old age pensions, and prevented a serious re-evaluation of
pension provision. The Russian Federation government inherited a
pension system ill-equipped to cope with its aging population. However,
the previous pension system did deliver payments on a regular basis to
nearly one in five citizens before 1991. Unlike other areas of often
unfulfillable social services guarantees (housing for families, quality
health
care and free access to higher education), the pension system represented
a Soviet social programme that provided consistent direct assistance to
a
large proportion of the population. Pension payments were an expected
entitlement.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Social Sciences,History
Cited by
7 articles.
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