In 1939 in the USSR, the very first old-age pensions (i.e. social security benefits for retirees) were introduced for representatives of a single profession. What was that profession?
By the 1950s, everybody in the USSR had old-age pensions, except for a single group. That group only got the right to old-age pensions in 1964. What was the profession of the people in this group?
No Googling!
I’m guessing party officials first got the old age pensions and the last people to get them are considered some kind of flight risk or rich. Former petit bourgeois merchants? Professors?
LikeLike
I’m going to guess teachers were last to get pensions? And maybe military was first? Although Shakti makes a good point that perhaps party officials were first to get pensions.
LikeLike
I am guessing military was the first and kolkhoz workers last.
LikeLike
that also makes a lot of soviet sense (as distinct from logic or ethics)
LikeLike
According to what I found the first Soviet pensions were to Red Army veterans in 1924.
Click to access JBW42006.pdf
LikeLike
Ok, then the second group in 1939. 🙂 And stop Googling! 🙂
LikeLike
Thinking of how soviet things worked in general, I would guess that members of parliament would be first and university professors or doctors would be last but that seems too obvious.
LikeLike
1939 was very very different in terms of class structure than everything that happened after WW2. This is my small hint. 🙂
LikeLike
Drummers!
LikeLike