Eastern and Central Europe in Film and Print Click to edit Master title style Soviet Microdistricts.

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Transcript of Eastern and Central Europe in Film and Print Click to edit Master title style Soviet Microdistricts.

Eastern and Central Europe in Film and Print

Click to edit Master title style

Soviet Microdistricts

Subdivision of residential districts

• Government-dictated urban planning

• Response to forced industrialization and urbanization

• Integrated with public transportation plan

• Schools and shops

Subdivision of residential districts

• “Ideal housing for our collective society”

• “Housing for a new way of life”

• Standardized, panel block construction

• Faceless grey rectangular boxes

• No pride of ownership

Contrast with the “American” dream

Estonia

Soviet Living Conditions

• 160 sq ft/citizen

• Inexpensive (subsidized by the state)

• 10-15 year waiting list

• Extended families crammed in small apartments

• Stated-owned or state-run cooperatives

• 1991: Right to personal property

Poland

Soviet Apartment Complexes

Soviet Apartment ComplexesSoviet Apartment Complexes

Soviet Apartment ComplexesSoviet Apartment Complexes

The Disincentives of Common Property

• 160 sq ft/citizen

• Inexpensive (subsidized by the state)

• 10-15 year waiting list

• Extended families crammed in small apartments

• 1991: Right to personal property

• Now privatized

• “Everyone owns, no one cares”

• No incentives to improve value or “productivity”

• Slackers get the same rewards

• Unbalanced market/supply chain

• Managers have control, susceptible to bribes

• Deterioration of equipment and assets

• Increased pollution

Transition to a Market Economy

• Initially, party managers took advantages of influence to seize real state, oil fields, etc.

• Rise of the oligarch (Tycoon)

• Commercial and contractual laws were not fully in place

• Housing: most desirable units sold first

• Few could afford mortgages

• Housing was 2-10%, now 25-30% of annual income

Source: Marhkam, Harvard University, 2003

Transition to a Market Economy

• Government continues to subsidize

• Stimulants for construction and development

• Heating and hot water subsidies

• Not yet true market pricing

• Still building apartments

• A few old microdistricts have become Roma ghettos (Slovakia)

Transition to a Market Economy

• Poor condition of “unsold” complexes

• Persistent housing shortages

• Unaffordable mortgages

• Need to demolish old complexes (would increase shortages)

• Poles holding on to current units

• Housing no longer a “social right”

Poland Today:

• Member of EU

• Attracting foreign investors

• Courts are flooded with restitution claims for private property seized by Germany and the Communists.

Poland Today:

• Member of EU

• Attracting foreign investors

• Courts are flooded with restitution claims for private property seized by Germany and the Communists.

Poland Today: •People in Poland work 1966 hours a year, higher than the OECD average of 1739 hours.

•In Poland, nearly 59% of the working-age population aged 15 to 64 has a paid job. This figure is lower than the OECD employment average of 65%.

•Only 36% of Poles believe that their communities are tolerant of migrants, ethnic minorities and gays and lesbians, well below the OECD average of 61% and the 3rd lowest in the OECD after Turkey and Estonia.

SOURCE: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

Poland Today: •In Poland, the average home contains one room per person, less than the OECD average of 1.6 rooms per person. (US = 2.3)

•In Poland, the average household earned $13,811 USD in 2008, less than the OECD average .

•When asked, 35% of people in Poland said they were satisfied with their life, much lower than the OECD average of 59%.

•At 54% of the eligible population, Poland has one of the lowest voting rates in Parliamentary elections in the OECD (average 70%).

•SOURCE: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

Religion in Europe: Belief in God

GDP Per Inhabinant

GDP Per Inhabinant