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- Q7552430 subject Q8372981.
- Q7552430 subject Q8398410.
- Q7552430 subject Q8442013.
- Q7552430 abstract "Czechoslovakia, of all the East European countries, entered the postwar era with a relatively balanced social structure and an equitable distribution of resources. Despite some poverty, overall it was a country of relatively well-off workers, small-scale producers, farmers, and a substantial middle class. Nearly half the populace was in the middle-income bracket. Ironically, perhaps, it was balanced and relatively prosperous Czechoslovakia that carried nationalization and income redistribution further than any other East European country. By the mid-1960s, the complaint was that leveling had gone too far. The lowest-paid 40% of the population accounted for 60% of national income. Earning differentials between blue-collar and white-collar workers were lower than in any other country in Eastern Europe. Further, equitable income distribution was combined in the late 1970s with relative prosperity. Along with East Germany and Hungary, Czechoslovakia enjoyed one of the highest standards of living of any of the Warsaw Pact countries through the 1980s. Even in Czechoslovakia, where the party's pursuit of socialist equality was thorough, the "classless" society turned out to be highly diverse. In the mid-1980s, Czechoslovak censuses divided the population into several occupational groups: workers, other employees, members of various cooperatives (principally agricultural cooperatives), small farmers, self-employed tradesmen and professionals, and capitalists. Of these categories, "other employees" was the most diverse, encompassing everyone from low-level clerical workers to cabinet ministers. "Workers" were those whose jobs were primarily manual and industrial. There was the time-hallowed distinction between:workers (manual or low-level clerical employees),agricultural employees, andthe intelligentsia (whose work is primarily mental and requires more education).".
- Q7552430 wikiPageExternalLink 300-30.htm.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q10294.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q1155757.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q124035.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q178564.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q208622.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q27468.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q33946.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q7264.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q727724.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q7832008.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q8059339.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q8372981.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q8398410.
- Q7552430 wikiPageWikiLink Q8442013.
- Q7552430 comment "Czechoslovakia, of all the East European countries, entered the postwar era with a relatively balanced social structure and an equitable distribution of resources. Despite some poverty, overall it was a country of relatively well-off workers, small-scale producers, farmers, and a substantial middle class. Nearly half the populace was in the middle-income bracket.".
- Q7552430 label "Society of Communist Czechoslovakia".