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Journal of European Public Policy

Volume 15, Issue 6, 2008

Special Issue: Beyond Conditionality: International Institutions in Postcommunist Europe after Enlargement

Out-liberalizing the EU: pension privatization in Central and Eastern Europe

Out-liberalizing the EU: pension privatization in Central and Eastern Europe

DOI:
10.1080/13501760802196853
Mitchell A. Orenstein*

pages 899-917

Available online: 08 Feb 2011

Abstract

The pension privatization trend that swept Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) between 1998 and 2004 presents a conundrum when viewed from the perspective of European Union (EU) enlargement. While these reforms took place at around the same time as EU accession, the EU did not use its formidable membership conditionality to impose them on CEE accession states. This article reviews the major causal explanations for pension privatization in CEE and finds that a critical factor was the transnational policy campaign launched by the World Bank and allied organizations in the mid-1990s. Pension privatization appealed to CEE accession states because it was significantly more ‘liberal’ than EU social policy norms. Pension privatization enabled CEE liberals to out-liberalize the EU in an effort to further a low-wage, low-cost development strategy and attempt to exert leadership in EU economic policy-making.

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Details

  • Citation information:
  • Available online: 08 Feb 2011

Author biographies

Mitchell A. Orenstein is the S. Richard Hirsch Associate Professor of European Studies at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, USA.

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