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KMID : 0613620130330010484
Health Social Welfare Review
2013 Volume.33 No. 1 p.484 ~ p.512
The Process and the Issues of the Russian Pension Reform in the Post-Communism
Lee Sung-Kee

Won Seok-Jo
Abstract
This paper aims at reviewing the process and the issues of the Russian pension reforms in the Post-Communism. For the purpose, the soviet welfare system, the conditions and problems of the soviet pension system, its process and background of the pension reform, and its critical issues were analysed. On the analysis, some alternatives were proposed, and the future was prospected. The results are as follows. First, the russian pension reform in the post-communism was failed contrary to the success of the Eastern European and the former Soviet Federation States in the welfare reforms including the pension. A critical reason of the failure was Yeltsin government¡¯s incompetency. Yeltsin¡¯s economic reform was too radical that it made serious social problems such as unemployment, poor and inequality. Because of these reverse effects, the veto forces were organized, and political conflicts with them resulted in the reform stagnation and the failure of the pension reform. After all, Putin who had strong leadership and achieved economic recovery could reform the russian pension system in 2002. Second, it is not true that the success of the pension reform is totally Putin¡¯s even though Putin could reform the pension system Yeltsin has failed. Because Putin¡¯s success of the 2002 pension reform owed the establishment of the Pension Fund of Russia(PFR) in 1991 and the pension reform proposition in 1998 which were made by Yeltsin government. This means that Putin¡¯s pension reform succeeded Yeltsin¡¯s efforts. Third, according to the pension reform 2002 of Putin government, the russian pension system was restructured to the three-tier system composing of the basic pension, the nominally defined contributory pension and the individual accounts. This policy determination was influenced by the World Bank¡¯s advices. Fourth, the future of the russian pension reform has many issues such as upward adjusting the age of pension benefit, controlling too much generous early-retirement, realizing the level of pension benefits, improving the inequality of pension benefits, and increasing the interest rate of the individual accounts. Fifth, there are negative as well as positive variables in the russian pension reform. Negative ones are ageing society, inflation, low income, unemployment, and additional expenditure for institutional improvement of the pension system. Positive ones are institutional improvements in the age of pension benefit, the early-retirement, and the pension fund management. And the success of the pension reform depends on the russian macro economy. However, the oil and gas export economy of russia makes the perspective of the pension reform not clear.
KEYWORD
Post-communist Russian Welfare Reform, Russian Pension Reform, Nominal Defined Contributory System, Individual Accounts
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