The welfare state, whose origin is associated with the name of William H. Beveridge, has undergone many a transformation during its existence. Its heyday occurred in the 1950s and 1960s, driven by economic growth and a relatively high employment rate in Western European countries, which allowed the expansion of the existing and the emergence of new social services and measures. Social benefits in this period, however, did no longer concern just the poor in those countries (as in previous years), but they began to be applied on a wide scale to the middle class as well. When the oil crises emerged in 1973 and 1979, the Western countries experienced a downturn of their economic activities, which deepened and led to the current crisis of the European welfare state. The current situation of the welfare state, however, is not only caused by a slow economic growth but is influenced by other factors too, including in particular:
relatively high unemployment rate in developed countries, family function being reduced, continued decline in birth rates, ageing of the population, increasing budget strains caused by increasing pension and health care spending, deepening government budget deficits, This may lead to a state crisis that can result in Another problem of the current globalisation trend is migration processes, which mainly concern countries with forthcoming social policies.
but also the effects of globalisation, which are manifested in the social sphere mainly by the government’s decreasing role in the society
The welfare state According to Ryneš, the term of the “welfare state” was coined only after World War II (Ryneš, 2015). existence of multi-party democracy, liberal economy, some minimum power decentralisation of the government and state administration.
But what does the “welfare state” (the state of public social services
Put very simply, the welfare state strives to secure the conditions of “decent life” for all of its citizens. However, the definition of the term is difficult and inconsistent, which is mainly due to the diversity of forms of the welfare state and the diversity of perspectives on its nature; different theorists have not yet agreed on a uniform and comprehensive definition. They do agree, though, that in the strict sense, the welfare state represents a certain range of provision of key public social services (especially related to health, education, housing, income and, if needed, care services).
Keller (2011) is convinced that
Večeřa (1993) defines the welfare state as
Potůček (1995) identifies the welfare state as
A. Giddens already perceives some weaknesses of the welfare state because he claims that
According to Kvapilová (2010), the emergence of social law was conditioned by adopting social legislation, its development in England and Germany being different. In England, fundamental civil rights (freedom of speech and religion, freedom to sell, freedom to work freely) were created first, followed by political rights and social rights (with the adoption of social legislation); in Germany and Austria, social law was established first and then there were introduced civil and political rights.
Although individual social laws appeared in many countries even before the birth of the welfare state, the first ideas about it are associated with the works by J. Locke, T. Hobbes, J. J. Rousseau and J. Mill, and they can be traced also in the thoughts and ideas of the French Revolution. The state, however, had a very limited role in social policy until the end of 19th century. It was only the so-called Bismarck’s social reforms carried out in Germany Between 1883 and 1889, the compulsory sickness and accident insurance was introduced as well as retirement and disability pensions. William Beveridge worked as the director of the London School of Economics and Political Science and was the chairman of the state committee of the British Parliament; with his team, he created a comprehensive, elaborated and interconnected system of measures for Churchill’s government that aimed at providing employment, health care and a minimum standard of living for all citizens of the United Kingdom.
Ryneš (2015) combines the creation of the welfare state with the gradual fulfilment of the following requirements:
mutual help and assistance provision of help to the needy addressing human misery, hunger, helping the sick and the helpless foundation of workhouses, foundling-hospitals and hospitals managed by the church formation of associations of mutual self-support foundation of charity organisations on a religious basis the state’s involvement in the sense of taxes for the rich in order to deal with homelessness working hours adjustment, efforts to tackle unemployment at both the business and the state levels emergence of social and state law-making emergence of charity and association activities and insurance
The causes that led to the creation of the welfare state are mostly (Krebs, 2010): advance in scientific knowledge, introduction of new technologies, orientation towards the cultivation of human factor, change of relations between the individual and the state and the limitation or exclusion of the traditional ways of addressing the social assistance through one’s own power. The Swedish sociologist Walter Korpi (1983) unites the creation and development of the welfare state with the belief that it is primarily determined by political events. According to him, what is crucial for the development of the welfare state is the mobilisation of left-wing political parties and trade unions. The extent of the welfare state depends on its success and not on the degree of industrialisation. By contrast, Večeřa (1993) states that most concepts of the welfare state explain its genesis just by the social consequences of the industrialisation process and the emergence of industrial society.
Despite the fact that individual welfare states have some characteristics in common (state interventions in the social sphere, high degree of redistribution, etc.), the social system is shaped differently. Therefore, different countries understand the concept of the welfare state differently, which is influenced by natural conditions, social conscience, traditions, religious perceptions, prevailing customs, culture, historical development, etc., which has inevitably led to the emergence of different types of the welfare state. According to the socio-economic nature, it is most often divided into the following types: liberal, corporate and social-democratic. As Tomeš states (2010, p. 329), the classification of countries is based on the state-employer-citizen relationship. Specifically, “. . . the state either:
provides its citizens with a dignified living minimum through the public social protection, and the rest needs to be taken care of by the citizen’s diligence – the the state transfers the burden of social protection to employers and citizens – the the state takes responsibility for a comprehensive, adequate social protection of its citizens to safeguard their inherent human rights – the
The characteristics of the models are shown in Table 1.
Characteristics of types (models) of the welfare state
the state’s responsibility for fulfilling the needs | minimum | optimum | complete |
distribution according to the needs | marginal | secondary | primary |
range of obligatorily provided services | limited | extensive | complete |
population covered obligatorily by provided services | minority | majority | everyone |
amount of contributions | low | medium | high |
part of the national income intended for the state services | low | medium | high |
neediness examination | primary | secondary | marginal |
nature of the society’s clients | the poor | citizens | members |
clients’ status | low | medium | high |
specific country – example | United Kingdom | Germany | Sweden |
This typology was used also by the Danish theorist Gosta Esping-Andersen (1990) as the basis for his own differentiation of welfare states, later adding a fourth type – Southern European. In our case, however, his typology of welfare states will not be dealt with. The classification shown in the table is sufficient for the purposes of this paper.
The development of social policy from the establishment of the independent Czechoslovak state to the present will be addressed first. Then there will be compared the selected indicators of the countries that represent each type of the welfare state with the value of the same indicators for the Czech Republic. Based on this comparison, it is possible to conclude whether the Czech Republic is a welfare state and which type it leans forward.
In terms of creating the social infrastructure, the Czech or more precisely the Czechoslovak state was not formed on a “green field” after 1918; it adopted some laws and standards from Austria-Hungary, which were gradually modified. Specifically, it involved accident insurance for workers, old-age and sickness insurance and a rent control programme.
After the end of World War I, there were adopted laws on unemployment benefits, eight-hour working hours and the disbursement of pensions to disabled veterans and the bereaved of the fallen. In 1924, sickness insurance was reformed, and disability and old-age insurance of the workers employed in the private sector was codified. The economic crisis of the 1930s slowed down, or more precisely decreased social activities: e.g. the state aid scheme for the unemployed was modified so that only union members were entitled to the benefits; the housing protection programme The housing protection programme determined the amount of rent and specified the reasons for eviction.
Generally speaking, the whole system of social policy following 1945 was reformed and was characterised in particular by being based on full employment, with labour being enforced by law; the state became the basic and monopolistic entity of social policy. Another typical feature of this stage of development was the abuse of social policies also in order to keep the citizens loyal to the regime.
The ideas of guaranteeing social security were strengthened after World War II. In 1947, a comprehensive social insurance scheme was adopted for all employed persons and the National Insurance Company was founded. In terms of social insurance, four types were distinguished: accident, old-age, sickness and unemployment insurance. For old-age pensions, people were divided into three categories according to the sector in which they worked (the retirement age differed). Since “poverty was abolished”, benefits for the poor did not exist; although, they were later reintroduced but without legal support, which means that they did not officially exist until 1991 (Kvapilová, 2010). From the 1950s to the 1980s, the state-funded social services were distributed through employers. In 1974, the family policy was reformed to promote a higher natality rate (the so-called Husák’s children). It may be said that there existed a “welfare state” during this period, called as “Leninist model of the welfare state” The Leninist model of the welfare state was closely connected with the regimes in Central and Eastern Europe: the state had a monopoly on the provision of social services, but social assistance was given only to those who were part of the “working people” (the others were excluded from the system), and social and particularly civil rights were restricted.
After 1989, it was necessary to adapt the then welfare system to market conditions, while the following changes were fundamental in how social-policy institutions worked in the overall framework:
abolition of the obligation to work and the abolition of the “right to work”, abolition of the state’s monopoly on organising and providing social services, reform of social security and health care based on compulsory insurance (Potůček, 1995).
Leading experts prepared the Czech Social Reform, whose priorities were the following (Potůček, 2002):
work and development of human potential, family and the labour market, education and the labour market, elimination of discrimination, support of the development of the civil society and the non-profit sector, promotion of trust and reciprocity, responsibility and security within the arrangement of the social protection system.
Following this basis, a social reform was subsequently prepared, focusing mainly on:
active employment policy, liberalisation and pluralisation of the social security system, establishment of a rescue social security net (Potůček, 1995, p. 119).
The transformation of the social policy included all of its areas: employment policy, social security policy, which covered social insurance, welfare state support and social assistance, health care policy, education policy, housing policy and family policy.
In addition to these fundamental visible changes, the way how people thought and behaved had to be changed as well so that they were willing to assume responsibility for their destiny, not relying solely on the state. Interesting consequences may be also found in Macková, Kotlán (2017) or Macková (2015).
Table 1 outlines the characteristics of the welfare residual state, represented by the United Kingdom, the performance welfare state represented by the Federal Republic of Germany and the institutional welfare state represented by Sweden. Let us now compare the selected social spending of these countries between 1990 and 2018 with the social spending of the Czech Republic.
The total public social spending as a percentage of the countries’ GDP is shown in Figure 1. The tendencies in public social spending in the Czech Republic correspond to those of the United Kingdom, except for the year 2000 when the Czech Republic had its total public social expenditure, expressed as a percentage of GDP, higher than the UK; as it is evident, the trend is the opposite in the remaining years: the United Kingdom pays a higher percentage of its GDP for social spending than the Czech Republic One needs to realise, however, that these are relative indicators.
Summary public expenditure for old-age and survivors’ pensions, expressed as a percentage of GDP, is shown in Figure 2. This graph also shows a similar trend of these expenditures in the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic, again with the exception of 2000 when the spending of Sweden and the Czech Republic came closer together.
Total public expenditure for disability pensions and sick benefits as a percentage of GDP is shown in Figure 3. In this case, the spending as a percentage of GDP in the UK, Germany and the Czech Republic at the beginning and throughout the monitored period varies considerably as compared with Sweden; only at the end of the period does the spending as a percentage of GDP of each country converge.
Total public expenditure for families as a percentage of GDP is shown in Figure 4. This clearly shows that the United Kingdom and Sweden differ from the rest of the countries throughout the entire monitored period.
The presented graphical data show that the Czech Republic cannot be unequivocally classified into one particular type of the welfare state. Nevertheless, it is obvious that it will not be part of the institutional (social-democratic) type, whose characteristics do not correspond with the Czech Republic at all. It can therefore be assumed that the Czech Republic will oscillate between the liberal and the conservative type of the welfare state, considering also its other features:
Czechia has long been one of the countries with the lowest poverty and social exclusion rates in the EU. The overall risk of income poverty and social exclusion in 2017 was 12.2 percent of the population; a person falls into income poverty when not reaching even 60 percent of the median income. Around 960 000 Czechs lived below the income poverty line in 2017 (Czech Statistical Office, 2018). The people at risk of poverty and social exclusion, however, consisted of nearly one third of single mothers with children and elderly women over 65. The survey of the Czech Statistical Office also showed that about 67 percent of households can save money each month. Two thirds of elderly persons living alone manage to save money regularly. By contrast, every other single parent living with a child cannot do it. Housing loans are paid by around a fifth of Czech households. They mostly include couples with children. Even low-income households do not shun mortgages and building loans. According to the Czech Statistical Office, health care costs at a doctor do not represent any burden for most households. However, 11.7 percent of households has problems with paying for prescribed medicines and about 9 percent of citizens has difficulties to pay the costs at the dentist.
The unemployment rate in the Czech Republic has also been the lowest among the EU countries in recent years. The unemployment rate in the Czech Republic since 2014 up to the present is shown in Figure 5.
The purpose of this article was to show whether the Czech Republic is a welfare state or not.
As stated earlier, every modern developed country that meets the condition of a multi-party democracy, liberal economy and the existence of a certain decentralisation of government power and administration creates conditions for the emergence of a welfare state. Another already mentioned characteristic of a welfare state is the transfer of a substantial part of social activities to the state. As far as its own social attributes are concerned, the Czech Republic builds on the foundations that are based on the social policy of the first republic and which were decisively developed after 1989; today, it is the country with the lowest unemployment rates in the EU, with total public social spending oscillating around 20 percent of GDP and with citizens’ expenses on health care and education being negligible.
Based on these (and also other) facts, Czechia can be generally considered a welfare state. Unfortunately, it is not possible to clearly place Czechia in one particular type of the welfare state; the Czech Republic oscillates between the liberal and the conservative type. One of the factors is certainly the relatively short period of the country’s development, started in 1989 with the elementary system changes.