Welfare regimes in Central and Eastern Europe: Incorporating post-communist countries in a welfare regime typology


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volume 3, issue 2 pp 1-30.
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Abstract This article uses hierarchical cluster analysis to empirically assess if the postcommunist welfare states of Central and Eastern Europe can be classified according to any of Esping-Andersen’s well-known welfare types, or if they form a distinct group of their own. It shows that at the start of the twenty-first century, there are clear differences in the governmental programmes and the social situation between traditional Western welfare states and post-communist welfare states. The article argues that the welfare states in post-communist countries might be subdivided into three groups: (1) a group of former-USSR countries, including Russia and Belarus; (2) a group of rather successful Central and Eastern European countries including Poland and the Czech Republic, and (3) a group of developing welfare states, consisting of Romania, Moldova and Georgia.





Automatically Extracted Terms
  • welfare
  • country
  • state
  • welfare states
  • regime
  • european
  • policy
  • typology
  • esping-andersen
  • analysis
  • cluster
  • post-communist
  • di fferences
  • cluster analysis
  • european countries
  • group
  • fication
  • post-communist countries
  • european welfare states
  • fferent