Government With the transition from
socialism to
neo-liberal market economies and
democracies, many states saw a dramatic drop in the number of women represented in state parliaments. Such an example can be seen in the
parliament of Albania where the number of women representatives fell from 73 to 9 in the first post-collapse elections. The transition also saw a reduction in women's participation in the new political systems. These factors have made it difficult for women to advocate for women's rights in central and eastern Europe after the transition.
Employment ,
People's Republic of Slovenia, 1955 The transition from socialism to neo-liberal market economies saw an over-representation of women in unemployment that had not existed before in the central and eastern European countries. Though there was variation in this change depending on the country. In the former
Soviet Union this transition led to significant changes in all spheres including the labor market. Whilst there was a
gender pay gap in places such as the Soviet Union, due to protective legislation that restricted women's employment in jobs that were considered dangerous or physically demanding which meant that due to the fact that in the centralised wage system, where
market forces did not interfere, earnings within sectors were determined by the perception of a certain sector's
productivity, laboriousness and social usefulness,
women in Russia were highly concentrated in white-collar sectors such as
education,
healthcare,
trade, food and
light industry, their earnings were on average lower than those of men throughout the whole of the
Soviet Union's history, a similar concentration of women in the workforce and a similar trend were also seen in the
German Democratic Republic. After the collapse, due to laws such as the Law on the
State Enterprise (adopted prior to transition in 1987), meant that goods-producing enterprises had to meet their wage payment obligations from their own revenue. While this change scarcely affected women, as women were still concentrated in the "nonproductive" sector, it did affect the pay gap between women and men. The nonproductive sector, encompassing such sectors as education and healthcare, was still financed from the
state budget and was therefore at greater risk of
budgetary cuts, which occurred in the transitory period. In this transitory period for many states there was
economic disaster, and
Gale Stokes comments on how "many of the customary practices of ordinary life, such as the value of time, gender relations, the nature of public discourse, and the job environment, changed." Due to women being concentrated in the lower tier of the
income distribution, they were more vulnerable to such changes, and the rising social inequality had an adverse effect on the gender pay differentials during the transition years.
Rita Hansberry,
Christopher Gerry, Byung-Yeon Kim and Carmen Li provide evidence that the increase in
dispersion of incomes brought about by
liberalisation had a negative impact on the gender wage gap in Russia. , 1976 Beyond income equality, the transition increased the gender discrimination in workplaces. Many women left professional and managerial positions that women had occupied previously due to the ongoing removal of state childcare services in central and eastern European countries. Due to family considerations, it was predicted in 1993 that many women would leave the work force and consolidate in occasional, short-term, seasonal, undeclared, and other kinds of
precarious work, and this has been shown to have been the case in later research. Éva Fodor and Anikó Balogh, contrary to other researchers, based on pre-collapse and post-collapse survey data, have said that opinions on women as homemakers and their contribution to the workforce, have changed little in central and eastern European states, and in contrast
western European states have greatly liberalised their views on women within the home and workforce. The transition also saw a shift in most economies from
heavy industry to light industry, this saw many men made redundant from jobs within heavy industry moving into light industry which had been a highly feminised sector of the economy during the communist period.
Reproductive rights and sexual violence in Wrocław, 3 October 2016 as part of the Some rights, such as reproductive rights which had been achieved under the previous socialist regimes were subsequently challenged in countries after the fall of those regimes. The restriction of access to abortion in the years immediately after the collapse saw mass protests from women in
Czechoslovakia and
Poland, with the number of legal abortions conducted per year in Poland dropping by over 30,000 from 1991 to 1993. In
Russia,
pornography proliferated after the collapse, whilst in the former
Yugoslavia an epidemic of mass
rape occurred.
Slavenka Drakulić described the
liberalisation of the economy and society in Yugoslavia as: With the negative economic situations many women found themselves in during the market liberalisation of the economies,
human traffickers became prominent in trafficking women around central and eastern Europe, and to western Europe from central and eastern Europe for
prostitution.
Health The transition led to a reduction in the life expectancy of people across society in many countries, though to a lesser extent for women. == The example of Bulgaria ==