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Original Articles

Political and Economic Influences on the Health and Welfare of the Elderly in the USSR and Russia: 1955–2005

Pages 419-440 | Published online: 29 Jul 2010
 

Abstract

The study of the elderly in Russia is important because they constitute a significant social group in a country that is the world's biggest in geographic terms, has a large population (144 million in 2005), is part of both Asia and Europe, and has been transformed from a backward feudal one to an industrial and military superpower. This topic is of additional interest due to the fact that unusual political and economic forces have strongly affected the ageing process in Russia, the health and welfare needs of the elderly, and the provision to them of social and medical services. The politico-economic systems in Russia (communist dictatorship and a planned economy during 1955–91 and authoritarianism with a chaotically evolving capitalist economy in the transition period) have contributed to distortions in the demographic transition, notably sustained increases in age-specific deaths rates. Russian governments have developed comprehensive welfare and medical systems for the elderly that promise much but have had low priority status and scarce resources, and therefore have had many deficiencies. The objectives of this article are to describe the situation of the elderly in Russia in detail and to explain how political, social and economic factors have combined to generate their unique circumstances. This case study can help to place in comparative perspective the features and conditions of the elderly in both developing countries experiencing demographic transition and advanced countries interested in reforms of their welfare and medical programmes.

Notes

1 The Asian component of the Russian Federation is usually defined to consist of the territorial units in the Far Eastern Federal District (FEFD): Republic of Sakha (formerly the Yakutskaya autonomous republic), the Primorskii and Khabarovskii territories (krai), four regions (oblast’) (Amurskaya, Kamchatskaya, Magadanskaya and Sakhalinskaya), one autonomous region (Evreiskaya) and two autonomous districts (okrug) (Koryakskii, Chukotskii). In 2004, the FEFD encompassed 36.4% of the territory of the Russian Federation, but contained only 4.6% of its population. A broader definition of the Asian component of Russia would add to the FEFD territorial units East of the Ural Mountains and along the borders of Kazakhstan, China and Mongolia.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

CHRISTOPHER MARK DAVIS

The author would like to thank the British Academy Research Readership Programme and the Department of Economics of the University of Oxford for their support of the research for this article. He also would like to thank the editors of the special issue (Roger Goodman and Sarah Harper), Andreas Hoff, and an anonymous referee for their critical comments that have enabled him to improve the study.

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