Inequality and welfare state clientelism in Bosnia and Herzegovina Cover Image

Inequality and welfare state clientelism in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Inequality and welfare state clientelism in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Author(s): Nikolina Obradović, Goran Patrick Filić
Subject(s): Economy, National Economy, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Економски факултет Универзитета у Београду
Keywords: clientelism; social policy; democratisation; Bosnia and Herzegovina

Summary/Abstract: Inequality in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) is rampant, manifested not only through one of the highest Gini coefficients in Europe but also in unequal access to social benefits and services. We find this to be an outcome of BiH’s entitygovernment social policy, which has been created to serve ethnic clientelistic politics. As the country’s former social protection system adjusted in the immediate post-civil war period to a new asymmetric government structure made of two entities, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Republika Srpska, it helped the main ethnic political parties preserve their power and ethnic divisions. This was achieved through a comprehensive system of status-based social benefits, most notably war-related social benefits granted on the basis of ethnic and military service affiliation. As such, in both BiH’s entities the system of social protection is an instrument of political control that generates inequality by treating certain social groups differently in terms of access to and level of benefits, while excluding much of the population. The process is found to be endogenous; in other words, maintaining inequality in access to social benefits is essential for preserving clientelistic policy, and vice versa.

  • Issue Year: 64/2019
  • Issue No: 223
  • Page Range: 83-104
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: English
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