

The Soviet Social Contract and Why It Failed
Welfare Policy and Workers’ Politics from Brezhnev to Yeltsin
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ISBN 9780674828001
Publication date: 01/01/1993
As their woefully backward economy continues to crumble, much of the Soviet population remains indifferent, if not downright hostile, to the idea of reform. This phenomenon, so different from the Solidarity movement in Poland or the velvet revolution in Czechoslovakia, has been explained in terms of a “social contract”—a tacit agreement between the post-Stalin regime and the working class whereby the state provided economic and social security in return for the workers' political compliance. This book is the first critical assessment of the likelihood and implications of such a contract.
Linda Cook pursues the idea from Brezhnev's day to our own, and considers the constraining effect it may have had on Gorbachev's attempts to liberalize the Soviet economy. In case studies on job security, retail price stability, and social service subsidies, Cook identifies points at which leaders had to make critical decisions—to commit more resources or to abandon other policies at significant cost—in order to maintain the contract. The pattern that emerges attests to the validity of the social contract thesis for the Brezhnev period. At the same time, Cook's analysis points to several important factors, such as the uneven distribution of benefits, that help explain why labor unrest and activism have varied dramatically from sector to sector in recent years.
Ultimately, these case studies reveal, particularly for the Gorbachev period, deep conflicts between the old contract and the requisites of economic reform. Cook extends her analysis into the Yeltsin period to show how the democratizing state dealt weakly with labor's demands, seeking to stabilize labor relations with an inappropriate corporate structure. In the end, mobilized labor contributed greatly to the pressures that undermined Gorbachev's regime, and remained an obstacle to economic reform through the early months of Yeltsin's Russia.
Praise
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In this clear, tightly focused work, Cook lays out critical sources of perestroika’s ultimate failure, in Gorbachev’s fear of revoking the ‘social contract’ that had, however imperfectly, bound the old regime and much of the Soviet population... [A] thorough treatment of radical reform policies and uncertain implementation in the USSR’s twilight.
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One of the great problems about perestroika has been the attitude of the Soviet masses to the ideas of reform. Another problem has been the woefully backward condition of the Soviet economy, which in its collapse under Gorbachev has made the term ‘reform’ almost ironic. Previous writers on perestroika have tackled both problems in terms of generalities and platitudes about the technological backwardness of non-market economies. With Linda Cook’s book, we get a very valuable correction of those views.
Book Details
- 272 pages
- 6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches
- Harvard University Press
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